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There is a long very complex story leading to these series of bombings. To fully understand the motivation and ideology you have to go back to the King David Hotel Bombing. FollowingWW2 militant Europeans migrated to Palestine claiming religious right to the land. Violent guerilla WW2 style tactics were introduced across racial and religious divide. Hitler was violently racist and religiously persecuted. Some arriving immigrants still believed in his method, desiring a violent final solution to race and religious divide. The prime motivational factor in the King David Hotel diplomatic bombing was to get the British to leave so the violent conquest could begin. The bombers dressed as muslim arabs, in classic false flag fashion. An hour after the US Ambassador took over in 1948, The US Consulate was bombed, just like the British before. The invading force Hagganah, employed parallel structure groups, like Irgun and Stern Gang, to do the wet work bombings, shootings, kidnappings, and assasinations of occupied British forces. The parallel groups served the same interest but allowed deniability. They loved bombing everthing from embassies and barracks to police and train stations. It worked! The British pulled out under the pressure. The terrorism paid off well for Israel. The nation was born in successful 'Embassy Bombings'.
Forward to the USS Liberty. US meddling threatens Israeli invasion of the Sinai during war with Egypt. Israel trys to sink an unarmed US Navy ship. Our allies are dangerous backstabbing killers that would attack ruthlessly to get their way. Allies don't bomb allied embassies and troops ... Israel does. They are not Americas ally, only an idiot would call repeat backstabbers an 'ally'..
Forward to the Lebanese Civil War. Power structures and government vitally important to Israel crumble and fall. Israel takes sides and begins training, supplying, and operating violent militia groups to counter Turkish and Syrian influence. The worst in terrorism and mass killings was the Phalangists, an Israeli backed Al-Qaeda-like parallel structure, labeled for western media as Christian Democrats, that could do Israeli wet operations. They car bombed everything they could drive up to.
The Israeli backed militias were unable to sieze power in Beirut. Israel announced its intent to invade the golan border region for security from 'Palestinian' rockets as early as 1980. They just needed provocation. It soon came with an attempted assasinatio outside the Israeli embassy in UK. The 1982 Lebanon War (Hebrew: מלחמת לבנון הראשונה‎, Milhemet Levanon Harishona, "the first Lebanon war"), called Operation Peace for Galilee (Hebrew: מבצע שלום הגליל, or מבצע של"ג‎ Mivtsa Shlom HaGalil or Mivtsa Sheleg) by Israel, and later known in Israel as the Lebanon War and First Lebanon War, began on 6 June 1982, when the Israel Defense Forces invaded southern Lebanon. They told Reagan it was for a buffer for rockets, then they drove straight to Beirut and seized power. Dirty rotten liars. Reagan was very disappointed they misled their true intentions. After the UN got word of the Palestinian and Lebanese civilians being slaughtered in war crimes under direct IDF command, a resolution was passed.
Reagan sent US marines not to stop the Palestinians from killing Israelis or Lebanese, but to stop them from being slaughtered by Israel's Al-Qaeda terrorist 'Christian' 'Democrat' structure. Reagan and the US Marines were like the British in 1946, interfering with a greater political picture vital to Israeli 'security' and interests in the region. Reagan, after 3 King Davids, did like the British and left. The Lebanese hostage crisis then immediately dragged him back to Israel which led to Israel supplying US weapons to our enemy, Iran, in a war with Iraq while America ran a parallel guerilla 'mujahadeen' militia, like Israel in Lebanon, in Iran's other neighbor, Afghanistan ... the rest is history.

published:12 Apr 2014

views:40610

Like ThisMovie Trailer? Go to http://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video, or to see movie trailers of over 700 other military videos.
This a a two minute sample. The entire video is 50 minutes. This video is divided into two parts. Part one is narrated documenting the story of the Marines who landed in Lebanon to secure American interests, and the naval personnel that got them there. Titled "SummerIncident" this U.S. Navy film shows the preparations for and the landing of Marines in Lebanon in the summer of 1958 to guarantee the sovereignty of that country and to protect U.S. civilians there. Amphibious Squadron 4 en route to the U.S. is turned around. The carrier ESSEX, at Athens, Greece, gets underway for the eastern Mediterranean, and other Sixth Fleet units sail for Lebanon. AdmiralArleigh Burke, Chief of Naval Operations, is shown in several scenes in the Navy's flag plot in Washington, DC as the operation progresses. The 2ndBattalion, 2nd Marines are in the initial landing, from trhe APA 36, LST 1156 and other Sixth Fleet amphibious ships. Aircraft from the ESSEX provide reconnaisance and air support for the landing. This unopposed landing is carried out successfully by the Navy-Marine Corps team.
Part two of this video documents Marine Corps activities in and around Beirut including, the airport, waterfront, docks. Also includes a joint patrol of Beirut by Marine, Army, Navy and Lebanese police.

Like ThisMovie Trailer? Go to https://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video, or to see movie trailers of over 700 other military videos.
The first part of this 50-minute DVD covers the arrival at Beirut of the 24th Marine Amphibious Unit (MAU) in May 1983. Includes excellent scenes of Marines and equipment (tanks, amtracs, jeeps, etc..) coming ashore in Lebanon and moving inland.
Video also includes excellent aerials shot via helicopter of the city of Beirut.
The second part of this video covers the aftermath of the bombing of the Marine Corps Headquarters resulting in 241 dead. Includes extensive coverage of Marines and multinational forces clearing debris and removing bodies. Also includes a tour of the bombrd area by Vice PresidentGeorge Bush Sr.

Link to order this clip:
http://www.criticalpast.com/video/65675039923_United-States-Marines_boat-lowered-from-davit_marines-checked_man-operate-controls-aboard-ship
Historic Stock Footage Archival and VintageVideo Clips in HD.
U.S. Marines preparing for amphibious landing at Beirut, Lebanon, in 1958US Marines being checked by officers on deck of a transport ship, prior to disembarkation. Sailor operating controls to lower LCVP (Landing craftVehiclePersonnel) from the davit. Boat lowered over the side to transport Marines to the beach at Beirut, Lebanon. Location: Beirut Lebanon. Date: July 1958.
Visit us at www.CriticalPast.com:
57,000+ broadcast-quality historic clips for immediate download.
Fully digitized and searchable, the CriticalPast collection is one of the largest archival footage collections in the world. All clips are licensed royalty-free, worldwide, in perpetuity. CriticalPast offers immediate downloads of full-resolution HD and SD masters and full-resolution time-coded screeners, 24 hours a day, to serve the needs of broadcast news, TV, film, and publishing professionals worldwide. Still photo images extracted from the vintage footage are also available for immediate download. CriticalPast is your source for imagery of worldwide events, people, and B-roll spanning the 20th century.

published:01 May 2014

views:954

Ebook eB007-Beirut part one: Working in Beirut Lebanon during the 80s it was quite a time. This was the first time I had ever been out of the country for any length of time. I had never been in the Middle East before I would often go walking around with my camera taking photographs.
I had no idea just how dangerous this was people would stop me and ask Yeah, what do you think you are doing or you cannot be walking in these neighborhoods with gestures to the camera. Yes I was doing it all the time little did I know that I could easily spent years in prison or be held for ransom.
Working for CBSNews in Lebanon during the early 80s was quite an adventure. I got to meet great people like Larry Pentax, Bob Simon and, many, many more. I was there for almost 2 ½ years. This book is a testimony of everyday life in Beirut during those troubled times.

If you haven't been surprised, we are sure will be surprised when you visit The Marine And WildlifeMuseum - Lebanon, Jeita - Jeita GrottoMainRoad.
Welcome to the world's unique museum as classified by the National Geographic Society. For more than twenty years the owner Dr. Jamal Younes has been diving the depths of the seas in search of its treasures and wonderful creatures.
Today his collection of over two thousand species is displayed at The Marine And Wildlife Museum of Jeita. All that you will see is the biggest and finest in the world. This will be a once in a lifetime to see face to face the wonderful land and sea creatures of Lebanon.
Marine LifePresent:
-Giant Shells
-Sharks And Dolphins
-Molluscs
-Echinoderms
-Soft And HardCoral
-Sponges
Wildlife Present:
-Reptiles
-Mammals
-Birds
-Insects
Stones Present:
-250 Kinds of Semi-precious Stones
-Lebanese FossilsAll specimens are scientifically identified in French, English, and Arabic.
You haven't experienced Lebanon if you haven't visited the marine and wildlife museum containing Lebanon's most treasured collections.
E-Mail: younesj_2@hotmail.com G-Mail: jamalyounes46@gmail.com
WEBSITE: lbmarinlife.piczo.com

published:09 Jan 2013

views:2301

Originally published on December 16, 2013
An Israeli soldier was killed by suspected sniper fire from the Lebanese side of the border at around 8:30 pm Sunday. The shooting occurred as an IsraeliIDF patrol jeep was driving along a road near the town of Naqora, a site located along the so-called" blue line," the unofficial border between Israel and Lebanon.
Sources from both Israel and Lebanon say the first shots were fired from the Lebanese side of the border. Israeli troops returned fire. Reports claim the Lebanese military has confirmed one of its soldiers is missing and is a suspect in the incident.
IDF troops returned fire and offered first aid to the Israeli soldier hit by sniper gunfire, but the man, identified in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz as 31 year-old Master Sgt. Sholmi Cohen, died after being transported to hospital.
The area where the shooting occurred has not seen significant flare-ups of violence for some three years and initially, Israeli authorities believed the shooting could have been a diversion to allow militants to slip into Israel. IDF helicopters dropped flares over the area, but no infiltrates were seen.
The United Nations has called on all sides to exercise restraint, but a senior Israeli officer told reporters that Israel reserves the right to respond in its own way and said the military is contemplating its options.
Both Israel and Lebanon are investigating the shooting, but both sides say they do not believe the militant group Hezbollah was involved in Sunday's shooting.
--------------------------------------------------------
TomoNews is your daily source for top animated news. We've combined animation and video footage with a snarky personality to bring you the biggest and best stories from around the world.
For news that's fun and never boring, visit our channel:
https://www.youtube.com/user/TomoNewsUS
Subscribe to stay updated on all the top stories:
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-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4prKTN9bYQc
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

The earliest evidence of civilization in Lebanon dates back more than seven thousand years, predating recorded history. Lebanon was the home of the Canaanites/Phoenicians and their kingdom, a maritime culture that flourished for over a thousand years (c. 1550–539 BC). In 64 BC, the region came under the rule of the Roman Empire, and eventually became one of the Empire's leading centers of Christianity. In the Mount Lebanon range a monastic tradition known as the Maronite Church was established. As the ArabMuslims conquered the region, the Maronites held onto their religion and identity. However, a new religious group, the Druze, established themselves in Mount Lebanon as well, generating a religious divide that has lasted for centuries. During the Crusades, the Maronites re-established contact with the Roman Catholic Church and asserted their communion with Rome. The ties they established with the Latins have influenced the region into the modern era.

Marines

Marines, also known as a marine corps and naval infantry, are an infantry force that specializes in the support of naval and army operations on land and at sea, as well as the execution of their own operations. In the majority of countries, the marine force is part of the navy, but it can also be under the army like the Troupes de marine (French Marines) and Givati Brigade (Israeli Marines), or form an independent armed service branch like the United States Marine Corps and Royal Marines.

Historically, tasks undertaken by marines have included providing protection from war while at sea, reflecting the pressed nature of the ships' company and the risk of mutiny. Other tasks would include boarding of vessels during combat or capture of prize ships and providing manpower for raiding ashore in support of the naval objectives.

With the industrialization of warfare in the 20th century the scale of landing operations increased; this brought with it an increased likelihood of opposition and a need for co-ordination of various military elements. Marine forces evolved to specialize in the skills and capabilities required for amphibious warfare.

Beirut

Beirut (Arabic:بيروت‎Bayrūt; Biblical Hebrew: בְּאֵרוֹת Be'erot; Hebrew: ביירות Beirut; Latin: Berytus; French:Beyrouth; Turkish:Beyrut; Armenian:Պէյրութ Beyrut) is the capital and largest city of Lebanon. No recent population census has been done but in 2007 estimates ranged from slightly more than 1million to slightly less than 2million as part of Greater Beirut. Located on a peninsula at the midpoint of Lebanon's Mediterranean coast, Beirut is the country's largest and main seaport.

There is a long very complex story leading to these series of bombings. To fully understand the motivation and ideology you have to go back to the King David Hotel Bombing. FollowingWW2 militant Europeans migrated to Palestine claiming religious right to the land. Violent guerilla WW2 style tactics were introduced across racial and religious divide. Hitler was violently racist and religiously persecuted. Some arriving immigrants still believed in his method, desiring a violent final solution to race and religious divide. The prime motivational factor in the King David Hotel diplomatic bombing was to get the British to leave so the violent conquest could begin. The bombers dressed as muslim arabs, in classic false flag fashion. An hour after the US Ambassador took over in 1948, The US Consulate was bombed, just like the British before. The invading force Hagganah, employed parallel structure groups, like Irgun and Stern Gang, to do the wet work bombings, shootings, kidnappings, and assasinations of occupied British forces. The parallel groups served the same interest but allowed deniability. They loved bombing everthing from embassies and barracks to police and train stations. It worked! The British pulled out under the pressure. The terrorism paid off well for Israel. The nation was born in successful 'Embassy Bombings'.
Forward to the USS Liberty. US meddling threatens Israeli invasion of the Sinai during war with Egypt. Israel trys to sink an unarmed US Navy ship. Our allies are dangerous backstabbing killers that would attack ruthlessly to get their way. Allies don't bomb allied embassies and troops ... Israel does. They are not Americas ally, only an idiot would call repeat backstabbers an 'ally'..
Forward to the Lebanese Civil War. Power structures and government vitally important to Israel crumble and fall. Israel takes sides and begins training, supplying, and operating violent militia groups to counter Turkish and Syrian influence. The worst in terrorism and mass killings was the Phalangists, an Israeli backed Al-Qaeda-like parallel structure, labeled for western media as Christian Democrats, that could do Israeli wet operations. They car bombed everything they could drive up to.
The Israeli backed militias were unable to sieze power in Beirut. Israel announced its intent to invade the golan border region for security from 'Palestinian' rockets as early as 1980. They just needed provocation. It soon came with an attempted assasinatio outside the Israeli embassy in UK. The 1982 Lebanon War (Hebrew: מלחמת לבנון הראשונה‎, Milhemet Levanon Harishona, "the first Lebanon war"), called Operation Peace for Galilee (Hebrew: מבצע שלום הגליל, or מבצע של"ג‎ Mivtsa Shlom HaGalil or Mivtsa Sheleg) by Israel, and later known in Israel as the Lebanon War and First Lebanon War, began on 6 June 1982, when the Israel Defense Forces invaded southern Lebanon. They told Reagan it was for a buffer for rockets, then they drove straight to Beirut and seized power. Dirty rotten liars. Reagan was very disappointed they misled their true intentions. After the UN got word of the Palestinian and Lebanese civilians being slaughtered in war crimes under direct IDF command, a resolution was passed.
Reagan sent US marines not to stop the Palestinians from killing Israelis or Lebanese, but to stop them from being slaughtered by Israel's Al-Qaeda terrorist 'Christian' 'Democrat' structure. Reagan and the US Marines were like the British in 1946, interfering with a greater political picture vital to Israeli 'security' and interests in the region. Reagan, after 3 King Davids, did like the British and left. The Lebanese hostage crisis then immediately dragged him back to Israel which led to Israel supplying US weapons to our enemy, Iran, in a war with Iraq while America ran a parallel guerilla 'mujahadeen' militia, like Israel in Lebanon, in Iran's other neighbor, Afghanistan ... the rest is history.

1:59

Marine Corps In Lebanon In 1958

Marine Corps In Lebanon In 1958

Marine Corps In Lebanon In 1958

Like ThisMovie Trailer? Go to http://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video, or to see movie trailers of over 700 other military videos.
This a a two minute sample. The entire video is 50 minutes. This video is divided into two parts. Part one is narrated documenting the story of the Marines who landed in Lebanon to secure American interests, and the naval personnel that got them there. Titled "SummerIncident" this U.S. Navy film shows the preparations for and the landing of Marines in Lebanon in the summer of 1958 to guarantee the sovereignty of that country and to protect U.S. civilians there. Amphibious Squadron 4 en route to the U.S. is turned around. The carrier ESSEX, at Athens, Greece, gets underway for the eastern Mediterranean, and other Sixth Fleet units sail for Lebanon. AdmiralArleigh Burke, Chief of Naval Operations, is shown in several scenes in the Navy's flag plot in Washington, DC as the operation progresses. The 2ndBattalion, 2nd Marines are in the initial landing, from trhe APA 36, LST 1156 and other Sixth Fleet amphibious ships. Aircraft from the ESSEX provide reconnaisance and air support for the landing. This unopposed landing is carried out successfully by the Navy-Marine Corps team.
Part two of this video documents Marine Corps activities in and around Beirut including, the airport, waterfront, docks. Also includes a joint patrol of Beirut by Marine, Army, Navy and Lebanese police.

3:47

President Reagan's Remarks on Marine Barracks Bombing in Lebanon on October 23, 1983

President Reagan's Remarks on Marine Barracks Bombing in Lebanon on October 23, 1983

President Reagan's Remarks on Marine Barracks Bombing in Lebanon on October 23, 1983

Marine Corps In Lebanon 1983

Like ThisMovie Trailer? Go to https://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video, or to see movie trailers of over 700 other military videos.
The first part of this 50-minute DVD covers the arrival at Beirut of the 24th Marine Amphibious Unit (MAU) in May 1983. Includes excellent scenes of Marines and equipment (tanks, amtracs, jeeps, etc..) coming ashore in Lebanon and moving inland.
Video also includes excellent aerials shot via helicopter of the city of Beirut.
The second part of this video covers the aftermath of the bombing of the Marine Corps Headquarters resulting in 241 dead. Includes extensive coverage of Marines and multinational forces clearing debris and removing bodies. Also includes a tour of the bombrd area by Vice PresidentGeorge Bush Sr.

Link to order this clip:
http://www.criticalpast.com/video/65675039923_United-States-Marines_boat-lowered-from-davit_marines-checked_man-operate-controls-aboard-ship
Historic Stock Footage Archival and VintageVideo Clips in HD.
U.S. Marines preparing for amphibious landing at Beirut, Lebanon, in 1958US Marines being checked by officers on deck of a transport ship, prior to disembarkation. Sailor operating controls to lower LCVP (Landing craftVehiclePersonnel) from the davit. Boat lowered over the side to transport Marines to the beach at Beirut, Lebanon. Location: Beirut Lebanon. Date: July 1958.
Visit us at www.CriticalPast.com:
57,000+ broadcast-quality historic clips for immediate download.
Fully digitized and searchable, the CriticalPast collection is one of the largest archival footage collections in the world. All clips are licensed royalty-free, worldwide, in perpetuity. CriticalPast offers immediate downloads of full-resolution HD and SD masters and full-resolution time-coded screeners, 24 hours a day, to serve the needs of broadcast news, TV, film, and publishing professionals worldwide. Still photo images extracted from the vintage footage are also available for immediate download. CriticalPast is your source for imagery of worldwide events, people, and B-roll spanning the 20th century.

2:16

Beirut Lebanon 1984 US Marine Corps

Beirut Lebanon 1984 US Marine Corps

Beirut Lebanon 1984 US Marine Corps

Ebook eB007-Beirut part one: Working in Beirut Lebanon during the 80s it was quite a time. This was the first time I had ever been out of the country for any length of time. I had never been in the Middle East before I would often go walking around with my camera taking photographs.
I had no idea just how dangerous this was people would stop me and ask Yeah, what do you think you are doing or you cannot be walking in these neighborhoods with gestures to the camera. Yes I was doing it all the time little did I know that I could easily spent years in prison or be held for ransom.
Working for CBSNews in Lebanon during the early 80s was quite an adventure. I got to meet great people like Larry Pentax, Bob Simon and, many, many more. I was there for almost 2 ½ years. This book is a testimony of everyday life in Beirut during those troubled times.

Lebanese Marine And Wildlife Museum - Lebanon, Jeita

If you haven't been surprised, we are sure will be surprised when you visit The Marine And WildlifeMuseum - Lebanon, Jeita - Jeita GrottoMainRoad.
Welcome to the world's unique museum as classified by the National Geographic Society. For more than twenty years the owner Dr. Jamal Younes has been diving the depths of the seas in search of its treasures and wonderful creatures.
Today his collection of over two thousand species is displayed at The Marine And Wildlife Museum of Jeita. All that you will see is the biggest and finest in the world. This will be a once in a lifetime to see face to face the wonderful land and sea creatures of Lebanon.
Marine LifePresent:
-Giant Shells
-Sharks And Dolphins
-Molluscs
-Echinoderms
-Soft And HardCoral
-Sponges
Wildlife Present:
-Reptiles
-Mammals
-Birds
-Insects
Stones Present:
-250 Kinds of Semi-precious Stones
-Lebanese FossilsAll specimens are scientifically identified in French, English, and Arabic.
You haven't experienced Lebanon if you haven't visited the marine and wildlife museum containing Lebanon's most treasured collections.
E-Mail: younesj_2@hotmail.com G-Mail: jamalyounes46@gmail.com
WEBSITE: lbmarinlife.piczo.com

0:54

Israeli soldier killed by Lebanon sniper

Israeli soldier killed by Lebanon sniper

Israeli soldier killed by Lebanon sniper

Originally published on December 16, 2013
An Israeli soldier was killed by suspected sniper fire from the Lebanese side of the border at around 8:30 pm Sunday. The shooting occurred as an IsraeliIDF patrol jeep was driving along a road near the town of Naqora, a site located along the so-called" blue line," the unofficial border between Israel and Lebanon.
Sources from both Israel and Lebanon say the first shots were fired from the Lebanese side of the border. Israeli troops returned fire. Reports claim the Lebanese military has confirmed one of its soldiers is missing and is a suspect in the incident.
IDF troops returned fire and offered first aid to the Israeli soldier hit by sniper gunfire, but the man, identified in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz as 31 year-old Master Sgt. Sholmi Cohen, died after being transported to hospital.
The area where the shooting occurred has not seen significant flare-ups of violence for some three years and initially, Israeli authorities believed the shooting could have been a diversion to allow militants to slip into Israel. IDF helicopters dropped flares over the area, but no infiltrates were seen.
The United Nations has called on all sides to exercise restraint, but a senior Israeli officer told reporters that Israel reserves the right to respond in its own way and said the military is contemplating its options.
Both Israel and Lebanon are investigating the shooting, but both sides say they do not believe the militant group Hezbollah was involved in Sunday's shooting.
--------------------------------------------------------
TomoNews is your daily source for top animated news. We've combined animation and video footage with a snarky personality to bring you the biggest and best stories from around the world.
For news that's fun and never boring, visit our channel:
https://www.youtube.com/user/TomoNewsUS
Subscribe to stay updated on all the top stories:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TomoNewsUS
Stay connected with us here:
Facebook http://www.facebook.com/TomoNewsUS
Twitter @tomonewsus http://www.twitter.com/TomoNewsUS
Google+ http://gplus.to/TomoNewsUS
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4prKTN9bYQc
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

The Sea of Lebanon

A year after the war and oil spill, Lebanon's marine environment is under threat from sewage and waste dumping, destructive fishing practices, coastal development, and oil spill.
Learn more:
http://www.greenpeace.org/lebanon/en/lebanon-oil-spill-2

There is a long very complex story leading to these series of bombings. To fully understand the motivation and ideology you have to go back to the King David Hotel Bombing. FollowingWW2 militant Europeans migrated to Palestine claiming religious right to the land. Violent guerilla WW2 style tactics were introduced across racial and religious divide. Hitler was violently racist and religiously persecuted. Some arriving immigrants still believed in his method, desiring a violent final solution to race and religious divide. The prime motivational factor in the King David Hotel diplomatic bombing was to get the British to leave so the violent conquest could begin. The bombers dressed as muslim arabs, in classic false flag fashion. An hour after the US Ambassador took over in 1948, The US Cons...

published: 12 Apr 2014

Marine Corps In Lebanon In 1958

Like ThisMovie Trailer? Go to http://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video, or to see movie trailers of over 700 other military videos.
This a a two minute sample. The entire video is 50 minutes. This video is divided into two parts. Part one is narrated documenting the story of the Marines who landed in Lebanon to secure American interests, and the naval personnel that got them there. Titled "SummerIncident" this U.S. Navy film shows the preparations for and the landing of Marines in Lebanon in the summer of 1958 to guarantee the sovereignty of that country and to protect U.S. civilians there. Amphibious Squadron 4 en route to the U.S. is turned around. The carrier ESSEX, at Athens, Greece, gets underway for the eastern Mediterranean, and other Sixth Fleet units sail for L...

published: 29 Jul 2008

President Reagan's Remarks on Marine Barracks Bombing in Lebanon on October 23, 1983

Marine Corps In Lebanon 1983

Like ThisMovie Trailer? Go to https://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video, or to see movie trailers of over 700 other military videos.
The first part of this 50-minute DVD covers the arrival at Beirut of the 24th Marine Amphibious Unit (MAU) in May 1983. Includes excellent scenes of Marines and equipment (tanks, amtracs, jeeps, etc..) coming ashore in Lebanon and moving inland.
Video also includes excellent aerials shot via helicopter of the city of Beirut.
The second part of this video covers the aftermath of the bombing of the Marine Corps Headquarters resulting in 241 dead. Includes extensive coverage of Marines and multinational forces clearing debris and removing bodies. Also includes a tour of the bombrd area by Vice PresidentGeorge Bush Sr.

USMC 22nd MAU Beirut Lebanon 1983 1984

Link to order this clip:
http://www.criticalpast.com/video/65675039923_United-States-Marines_boat-lowered-from-davit_marines-checked_man-operate-controls-aboard-ship
Historic Stock Footage Archival and VintageVideo Clips in HD.
U.S. Marines preparing for amphibious landing at Beirut, Lebanon, in 1958US Marines being checked by officers on deck of a transport ship, prior to disembarkation. Sailor operating controls to lower LCVP (Landing craftVehiclePersonnel) from the davit. Boat lowered over the side to transport Marines to the beach at Beirut, Lebanon. Location: Beirut Lebanon. Date: July 1958.
Visit us at www.CriticalPast.com:
57,000+ broadcast-quality historic clips for immediate download.
Fully digitized and searchable, the CriticalPast collection is one of the largest archival...

published: 01 May 2014

Beirut Lebanon 1984 US Marine Corps

Ebook eB007-Beirut part one: Working in Beirut Lebanon during the 80s it was quite a time. This was the first time I had ever been out of the country for any length of time. I had never been in the Middle East before I would often go walking around with my camera taking photographs.
I had no idea just how dangerous this was people would stop me and ask Yeah, what do you think you are doing or you cannot be walking in these neighborhoods with gestures to the camera. Yes I was doing it all the time little did I know that I could easily spent years in prison or be held for ransom.
Working for CBSNews in Lebanon during the early 80s was quite an adventure. I got to meet great people like Larry Pentax, Bob Simon and, many, many more. I was there for almost 2 ½ years. This book is a...

Lebanese Marine And Wildlife Museum - Lebanon, Jeita

If you haven't been surprised, we are sure will be surprised when you visit The Marine And WildlifeMuseum - Lebanon, Jeita - Jeita GrottoMainRoad.
Welcome to the world's unique museum as classified by the National Geographic Society. For more than twenty years the owner Dr. Jamal Younes has been diving the depths of the seas in search of its treasures and wonderful creatures.
Today his collection of over two thousand species is displayed at The Marine And Wildlife Museum of Jeita. All that you will see is the biggest and finest in the world. This will be a once in a lifetime to see face to face the wonderful land and sea creatures of Lebanon.
Marine LifePresent:
-Giant Shells
-Sharks And Dolphins
-Molluscs
-Echinoderms
-Soft And HardCoral
-Sponges
Wildlife Present:
-Reptiles
-Mammals...

published: 09 Jan 2013

Israeli soldier killed by Lebanon sniper

Originally published on December 16, 2013
An Israeli soldier was killed by suspected sniper fire from the Lebanese side of the border at around 8:30 pm Sunday. The shooting occurred as an IsraeliIDF patrol jeep was driving along a road near the town of Naqora, a site located along the so-called" blue line," the unofficial border between Israel and Lebanon.
Sources from both Israel and Lebanon say the first shots were fired from the Lebanese side of the border. Israeli troops returned fire. Reports claim the Lebanese military has confirmed one of its soldiers is missing and is a suspect in the incident.
IDF troops returned fire and offered first aid to the Israeli soldier hit by sniper gunfire, but the man, identified in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz as 31 year-old Master Sgt. Sholmi C...

The Sea of Lebanon

A year after the war and oil spill, Lebanon's marine environment is under threat from sewage and waste dumping, destructive fishing practices, coastal development, and oil spill.
Learn more:
http://www.greenpeace.org/lebanon/en/lebanon-oil-spill-2

There is a long very complex story leading to these series of bombings. To fully understand the motivation and ideology you have to go back to the King David Ho...

There is a long very complex story leading to these series of bombings. To fully understand the motivation and ideology you have to go back to the King David Hotel Bombing. FollowingWW2 militant Europeans migrated to Palestine claiming religious right to the land. Violent guerilla WW2 style tactics were introduced across racial and religious divide. Hitler was violently racist and religiously persecuted. Some arriving immigrants still believed in his method, desiring a violent final solution to race and religious divide. The prime motivational factor in the King David Hotel diplomatic bombing was to get the British to leave so the violent conquest could begin. The bombers dressed as muslim arabs, in classic false flag fashion. An hour after the US Ambassador took over in 1948, The US Consulate was bombed, just like the British before. The invading force Hagganah, employed parallel structure groups, like Irgun and Stern Gang, to do the wet work bombings, shootings, kidnappings, and assasinations of occupied British forces. The parallel groups served the same interest but allowed deniability. They loved bombing everthing from embassies and barracks to police and train stations. It worked! The British pulled out under the pressure. The terrorism paid off well for Israel. The nation was born in successful 'Embassy Bombings'.
Forward to the USS Liberty. US meddling threatens Israeli invasion of the Sinai during war with Egypt. Israel trys to sink an unarmed US Navy ship. Our allies are dangerous backstabbing killers that would attack ruthlessly to get their way. Allies don't bomb allied embassies and troops ... Israel does. They are not Americas ally, only an idiot would call repeat backstabbers an 'ally'..
Forward to the Lebanese Civil War. Power structures and government vitally important to Israel crumble and fall. Israel takes sides and begins training, supplying, and operating violent militia groups to counter Turkish and Syrian influence. The worst in terrorism and mass killings was the Phalangists, an Israeli backed Al-Qaeda-like parallel structure, labeled for western media as Christian Democrats, that could do Israeli wet operations. They car bombed everything they could drive up to.
The Israeli backed militias were unable to sieze power in Beirut. Israel announced its intent to invade the golan border region for security from 'Palestinian' rockets as early as 1980. They just needed provocation. It soon came with an attempted assasinatio outside the Israeli embassy in UK. The 1982 Lebanon War (Hebrew: מלחמת לבנון הראשונה‎, Milhemet Levanon Harishona, "the first Lebanon war"), called Operation Peace for Galilee (Hebrew: מבצע שלום הגליל, or מבצע של"ג‎ Mivtsa Shlom HaGalil or Mivtsa Sheleg) by Israel, and later known in Israel as the Lebanon War and First Lebanon War, began on 6 June 1982, when the Israel Defense Forces invaded southern Lebanon. They told Reagan it was for a buffer for rockets, then they drove straight to Beirut and seized power. Dirty rotten liars. Reagan was very disappointed they misled their true intentions. After the UN got word of the Palestinian and Lebanese civilians being slaughtered in war crimes under direct IDF command, a resolution was passed.
Reagan sent US marines not to stop the Palestinians from killing Israelis or Lebanese, but to stop them from being slaughtered by Israel's Al-Qaeda terrorist 'Christian' 'Democrat' structure. Reagan and the US Marines were like the British in 1946, interfering with a greater political picture vital to Israeli 'security' and interests in the region. Reagan, after 3 King Davids, did like the British and left. The Lebanese hostage crisis then immediately dragged him back to Israel which led to Israel supplying US weapons to our enemy, Iran, in a war with Iraq while America ran a parallel guerilla 'mujahadeen' militia, like Israel in Lebanon, in Iran's other neighbor, Afghanistan ... the rest is history.

There is a long very complex story leading to these series of bombings. To fully understand the motivation and ideology you have to go back to the King David Hotel Bombing. FollowingWW2 militant Europeans migrated to Palestine claiming religious right to the land. Violent guerilla WW2 style tactics were introduced across racial and religious divide. Hitler was violently racist and religiously persecuted. Some arriving immigrants still believed in his method, desiring a violent final solution to race and religious divide. The prime motivational factor in the King David Hotel diplomatic bombing was to get the British to leave so the violent conquest could begin. The bombers dressed as muslim arabs, in classic false flag fashion. An hour after the US Ambassador took over in 1948, The US Consulate was bombed, just like the British before. The invading force Hagganah, employed parallel structure groups, like Irgun and Stern Gang, to do the wet work bombings, shootings, kidnappings, and assasinations of occupied British forces. The parallel groups served the same interest but allowed deniability. They loved bombing everthing from embassies and barracks to police and train stations. It worked! The British pulled out under the pressure. The terrorism paid off well for Israel. The nation was born in successful 'Embassy Bombings'.
Forward to the USS Liberty. US meddling threatens Israeli invasion of the Sinai during war with Egypt. Israel trys to sink an unarmed US Navy ship. Our allies are dangerous backstabbing killers that would attack ruthlessly to get their way. Allies don't bomb allied embassies and troops ... Israel does. They are not Americas ally, only an idiot would call repeat backstabbers an 'ally'..
Forward to the Lebanese Civil War. Power structures and government vitally important to Israel crumble and fall. Israel takes sides and begins training, supplying, and operating violent militia groups to counter Turkish and Syrian influence. The worst in terrorism and mass killings was the Phalangists, an Israeli backed Al-Qaeda-like parallel structure, labeled for western media as Christian Democrats, that could do Israeli wet operations. They car bombed everything they could drive up to.
The Israeli backed militias were unable to sieze power in Beirut. Israel announced its intent to invade the golan border region for security from 'Palestinian' rockets as early as 1980. They just needed provocation. It soon came with an attempted assasinatio outside the Israeli embassy in UK. The 1982 Lebanon War (Hebrew: מלחמת לבנון הראשונה‎, Milhemet Levanon Harishona, "the first Lebanon war"), called Operation Peace for Galilee (Hebrew: מבצע שלום הגליל, or מבצע של"ג‎ Mivtsa Shlom HaGalil or Mivtsa Sheleg) by Israel, and later known in Israel as the Lebanon War and First Lebanon War, began on 6 June 1982, when the Israel Defense Forces invaded southern Lebanon. They told Reagan it was for a buffer for rockets, then they drove straight to Beirut and seized power. Dirty rotten liars. Reagan was very disappointed they misled their true intentions. After the UN got word of the Palestinian and Lebanese civilians being slaughtered in war crimes under direct IDF command, a resolution was passed.
Reagan sent US marines not to stop the Palestinians from killing Israelis or Lebanese, but to stop them from being slaughtered by Israel's Al-Qaeda terrorist 'Christian' 'Democrat' structure. Reagan and the US Marines were like the British in 1946, interfering with a greater political picture vital to Israeli 'security' and interests in the region. Reagan, after 3 King Davids, did like the British and left. The Lebanese hostage crisis then immediately dragged him back to Israel which led to Israel supplying US weapons to our enemy, Iran, in a war with Iraq while America ran a parallel guerilla 'mujahadeen' militia, like Israel in Lebanon, in Iran's other neighbor, Afghanistan ... the rest is history.

Marine Corps In Lebanon In 1958

Like ThisMovie Trailer? Go to http://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video, or to see movie trailers of over 700 other military videos.
This a a ...

Like ThisMovie Trailer? Go to http://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video, or to see movie trailers of over 700 other military videos.
This a a two minute sample. The entire video is 50 minutes. This video is divided into two parts. Part one is narrated documenting the story of the Marines who landed in Lebanon to secure American interests, and the naval personnel that got them there. Titled "SummerIncident" this U.S. Navy film shows the preparations for and the landing of Marines in Lebanon in the summer of 1958 to guarantee the sovereignty of that country and to protect U.S. civilians there. Amphibious Squadron 4 en route to the U.S. is turned around. The carrier ESSEX, at Athens, Greece, gets underway for the eastern Mediterranean, and other Sixth Fleet units sail for Lebanon. AdmiralArleigh Burke, Chief of Naval Operations, is shown in several scenes in the Navy's flag plot in Washington, DC as the operation progresses. The 2ndBattalion, 2nd Marines are in the initial landing, from trhe APA 36, LST 1156 and other Sixth Fleet amphibious ships. Aircraft from the ESSEX provide reconnaisance and air support for the landing. This unopposed landing is carried out successfully by the Navy-Marine Corps team.
Part two of this video documents Marine Corps activities in and around Beirut including, the airport, waterfront, docks. Also includes a joint patrol of Beirut by Marine, Army, Navy and Lebanese police.

Like ThisMovie Trailer? Go to http://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video, or to see movie trailers of over 700 other military videos.
This a a two minute sample. The entire video is 50 minutes. This video is divided into two parts. Part one is narrated documenting the story of the Marines who landed in Lebanon to secure American interests, and the naval personnel that got them there. Titled "SummerIncident" this U.S. Navy film shows the preparations for and the landing of Marines in Lebanon in the summer of 1958 to guarantee the sovereignty of that country and to protect U.S. civilians there. Amphibious Squadron 4 en route to the U.S. is turned around. The carrier ESSEX, at Athens, Greece, gets underway for the eastern Mediterranean, and other Sixth Fleet units sail for Lebanon. AdmiralArleigh Burke, Chief of Naval Operations, is shown in several scenes in the Navy's flag plot in Washington, DC as the operation progresses. The 2ndBattalion, 2nd Marines are in the initial landing, from trhe APA 36, LST 1156 and other Sixth Fleet amphibious ships. Aircraft from the ESSEX provide reconnaisance and air support for the landing. This unopposed landing is carried out successfully by the Navy-Marine Corps team.
Part two of this video documents Marine Corps activities in and around Beirut including, the airport, waterfront, docks. Also includes a joint patrol of Beirut by Marine, Army, Navy and Lebanese police.

published:29 Jul 2008

views:8834

back

President Reagan's Remarks on Marine Barracks Bombing in Lebanon on October 23, 1983

Marine Corps In Lebanon 1983

Like ThisMovie Trailer? Go to https://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video, or to see movie trailers of over 700 other military videos.
The firs...

Like ThisMovie Trailer? Go to https://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video, or to see movie trailers of over 700 other military videos.
The first part of this 50-minute DVD covers the arrival at Beirut of the 24th Marine Amphibious Unit (MAU) in May 1983. Includes excellent scenes of Marines and equipment (tanks, amtracs, jeeps, etc..) coming ashore in Lebanon and moving inland.
Video also includes excellent aerials shot via helicopter of the city of Beirut.
The second part of this video covers the aftermath of the bombing of the Marine Corps Headquarters resulting in 241 dead. Includes extensive coverage of Marines and multinational forces clearing debris and removing bodies. Also includes a tour of the bombrd area by Vice PresidentGeorge Bush Sr.

Like ThisMovie Trailer? Go to https://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video, or to see movie trailers of over 700 other military videos.
The first part of this 50-minute DVD covers the arrival at Beirut of the 24th Marine Amphibious Unit (MAU) in May 1983. Includes excellent scenes of Marines and equipment (tanks, amtracs, jeeps, etc..) coming ashore in Lebanon and moving inland.
Video also includes excellent aerials shot via helicopter of the city of Beirut.
The second part of this video covers the aftermath of the bombing of the Marine Corps Headquarters resulting in 241 dead. Includes extensive coverage of Marines and multinational forces clearing debris and removing bodies. Also includes a tour of the bombrd area by Vice PresidentGeorge Bush Sr.

Link to order this clip:
http://www.criticalpast.com/video/65675039923_United-States-Marines_boat-lowered-from-davit_marines-checked_man-operate-controls-aboard...

Link to order this clip:
http://www.criticalpast.com/video/65675039923_United-States-Marines_boat-lowered-from-davit_marines-checked_man-operate-controls-aboard-ship
Historic Stock Footage Archival and VintageVideo Clips in HD.
U.S. Marines preparing for amphibious landing at Beirut, Lebanon, in 1958US Marines being checked by officers on deck of a transport ship, prior to disembarkation. Sailor operating controls to lower LCVP (Landing craftVehiclePersonnel) from the davit. Boat lowered over the side to transport Marines to the beach at Beirut, Lebanon. Location: Beirut Lebanon. Date: July 1958.
Visit us at www.CriticalPast.com:
57,000+ broadcast-quality historic clips for immediate download.
Fully digitized and searchable, the CriticalPast collection is one of the largest archival footage collections in the world. All clips are licensed royalty-free, worldwide, in perpetuity. CriticalPast offers immediate downloads of full-resolution HD and SD masters and full-resolution time-coded screeners, 24 hours a day, to serve the needs of broadcast news, TV, film, and publishing professionals worldwide. Still photo images extracted from the vintage footage are also available for immediate download. CriticalPast is your source for imagery of worldwide events, people, and B-roll spanning the 20th century.

Link to order this clip:
http://www.criticalpast.com/video/65675039923_United-States-Marines_boat-lowered-from-davit_marines-checked_man-operate-controls-aboard-ship
Historic Stock Footage Archival and VintageVideo Clips in HD.
U.S. Marines preparing for amphibious landing at Beirut, Lebanon, in 1958US Marines being checked by officers on deck of a transport ship, prior to disembarkation. Sailor operating controls to lower LCVP (Landing craftVehiclePersonnel) from the davit. Boat lowered over the side to transport Marines to the beach at Beirut, Lebanon. Location: Beirut Lebanon. Date: July 1958.
Visit us at www.CriticalPast.com:
57,000+ broadcast-quality historic clips for immediate download.
Fully digitized and searchable, the CriticalPast collection is one of the largest archival footage collections in the world. All clips are licensed royalty-free, worldwide, in perpetuity. CriticalPast offers immediate downloads of full-resolution HD and SD masters and full-resolution time-coded screeners, 24 hours a day, to serve the needs of broadcast news, TV, film, and publishing professionals worldwide. Still photo images extracted from the vintage footage are also available for immediate download. CriticalPast is your source for imagery of worldwide events, people, and B-roll spanning the 20th century.

Beirut Lebanon 1984 US Marine Corps

Ebook eB007-Beirut part one: Working in Beirut Lebanon during the 80s it was quite a time. This was the first time I had ever been out of the country for any l...

Ebook eB007-Beirut part one: Working in Beirut Lebanon during the 80s it was quite a time. This was the first time I had ever been out of the country for any length of time. I had never been in the Middle East before I would often go walking around with my camera taking photographs.
I had no idea just how dangerous this was people would stop me and ask Yeah, what do you think you are doing or you cannot be walking in these neighborhoods with gestures to the camera. Yes I was doing it all the time little did I know that I could easily spent years in prison or be held for ransom.
Working for CBSNews in Lebanon during the early 80s was quite an adventure. I got to meet great people like Larry Pentax, Bob Simon and, many, many more. I was there for almost 2 ½ years. This book is a testimony of everyday life in Beirut during those troubled times.

Ebook eB007-Beirut part one: Working in Beirut Lebanon during the 80s it was quite a time. This was the first time I had ever been out of the country for any length of time. I had never been in the Middle East before I would often go walking around with my camera taking photographs.
I had no idea just how dangerous this was people would stop me and ask Yeah, what do you think you are doing or you cannot be walking in these neighborhoods with gestures to the camera. Yes I was doing it all the time little did I know that I could easily spent years in prison or be held for ransom.
Working for CBSNews in Lebanon during the early 80s was quite an adventure. I got to meet great people like Larry Pentax, Bob Simon and, many, many more. I was there for almost 2 ½ years. This book is a testimony of everyday life in Beirut during those troubled times.

If you haven't been surprised, we are sure will be surprised when you visit The Marine And WildlifeMuseum - Lebanon, Jeita - Jeita GrottoMainRoad.
Welcome to the world's unique museum as classified by the National Geographic Society. For more than twenty years the owner Dr. Jamal Younes has been diving the depths of the seas in search of its treasures and wonderful creatures.
Today his collection of over two thousand species is displayed at The Marine And Wildlife Museum of Jeita. All that you will see is the biggest and finest in the world. This will be a once in a lifetime to see face to face the wonderful land and sea creatures of Lebanon.
Marine LifePresent:
-Giant Shells
-Sharks And Dolphins
-Molluscs
-Echinoderms
-Soft And HardCoral
-Sponges
Wildlife Present:
-Reptiles
-Mammals
-Birds
-Insects
Stones Present:
-250 Kinds of Semi-precious Stones
-Lebanese FossilsAll specimens are scientifically identified in French, English, and Arabic.
You haven't experienced Lebanon if you haven't visited the marine and wildlife museum containing Lebanon's most treasured collections.
E-Mail: younesj_2@hotmail.com G-Mail: jamalyounes46@gmail.com
WEBSITE: lbmarinlife.piczo.com

If you haven't been surprised, we are sure will be surprised when you visit The Marine And WildlifeMuseum - Lebanon, Jeita - Jeita GrottoMainRoad.
Welcome to the world's unique museum as classified by the National Geographic Society. For more than twenty years the owner Dr. Jamal Younes has been diving the depths of the seas in search of its treasures and wonderful creatures.
Today his collection of over two thousand species is displayed at The Marine And Wildlife Museum of Jeita. All that you will see is the biggest and finest in the world. This will be a once in a lifetime to see face to face the wonderful land and sea creatures of Lebanon.
Marine LifePresent:
-Giant Shells
-Sharks And Dolphins
-Molluscs
-Echinoderms
-Soft And HardCoral
-Sponges
Wildlife Present:
-Reptiles
-Mammals
-Birds
-Insects
Stones Present:
-250 Kinds of Semi-precious Stones
-Lebanese FossilsAll specimens are scientifically identified in French, English, and Arabic.
You haven't experienced Lebanon if you haven't visited the marine and wildlife museum containing Lebanon's most treasured collections.
E-Mail: younesj_2@hotmail.com G-Mail: jamalyounes46@gmail.com
WEBSITE: lbmarinlife.piczo.com

Originally published on December 16, 2013
An Israeli soldier was killed by suspected sniper fire from the Lebanese side of the border at around 8:30 pm Sunday. The shooting occurred as an IsraeliIDF patrol jeep was driving along a road near the town of Naqora, a site located along the so-called" blue line," the unofficial border between Israel and Lebanon.
Sources from both Israel and Lebanon say the first shots were fired from the Lebanese side of the border. Israeli troops returned fire. Reports claim the Lebanese military has confirmed one of its soldiers is missing and is a suspect in the incident.
IDF troops returned fire and offered first aid to the Israeli soldier hit by sniper gunfire, but the man, identified in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz as 31 year-old Master Sgt. Sholmi Cohen, died after being transported to hospital.
The area where the shooting occurred has not seen significant flare-ups of violence for some three years and initially, Israeli authorities believed the shooting could have been a diversion to allow militants to slip into Israel. IDF helicopters dropped flares over the area, but no infiltrates were seen.
The United Nations has called on all sides to exercise restraint, but a senior Israeli officer told reporters that Israel reserves the right to respond in its own way and said the military is contemplating its options.
Both Israel and Lebanon are investigating the shooting, but both sides say they do not believe the militant group Hezbollah was involved in Sunday's shooting.
--------------------------------------------------------
TomoNews is your daily source for top animated news. We've combined animation and video footage with a snarky personality to bring you the biggest and best stories from around the world.
For news that's fun and never boring, visit our channel:
https://www.youtube.com/user/TomoNewsUS
Subscribe to stay updated on all the top stories:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TomoNewsUS
Stay connected with us here:
Facebook http://www.facebook.com/TomoNewsUS
Twitter @tomonewsus http://www.twitter.com/TomoNewsUS
Google+ http://gplus.to/TomoNewsUS
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4prKTN9bYQc
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

Originally published on December 16, 2013
An Israeli soldier was killed by suspected sniper fire from the Lebanese side of the border at around 8:30 pm Sunday. The shooting occurred as an IsraeliIDF patrol jeep was driving along a road near the town of Naqora, a site located along the so-called" blue line," the unofficial border between Israel and Lebanon.
Sources from both Israel and Lebanon say the first shots were fired from the Lebanese side of the border. Israeli troops returned fire. Reports claim the Lebanese military has confirmed one of its soldiers is missing and is a suspect in the incident.
IDF troops returned fire and offered first aid to the Israeli soldier hit by sniper gunfire, but the man, identified in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz as 31 year-old Master Sgt. Sholmi Cohen, died after being transported to hospital.
The area where the shooting occurred has not seen significant flare-ups of violence for some three years and initially, Israeli authorities believed the shooting could have been a diversion to allow militants to slip into Israel. IDF helicopters dropped flares over the area, but no infiltrates were seen.
The United Nations has called on all sides to exercise restraint, but a senior Israeli officer told reporters that Israel reserves the right to respond in its own way and said the military is contemplating its options.
Both Israel and Lebanon are investigating the shooting, but both sides say they do not believe the militant group Hezbollah was involved in Sunday's shooting.
--------------------------------------------------------
TomoNews is your daily source for top animated news. We've combined animation and video footage with a snarky personality to bring you the biggest and best stories from around the world.
For news that's fun and never boring, visit our channel:
https://www.youtube.com/user/TomoNewsUS
Subscribe to stay updated on all the top stories:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TomoNewsUS
Stay connected with us here:
Facebook http://www.facebook.com/TomoNewsUS
Twitter @tomonewsus http://www.twitter.com/TomoNewsUS
Google+ http://gplus.to/TomoNewsUS
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4prKTN9bYQc
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

The Sea of Lebanon

A year after the war and oil spill, Lebanon's marine environment is under threat from sewage and waste dumping, destructive fishing practices, coastal developme...

A year after the war and oil spill, Lebanon's marine environment is under threat from sewage and waste dumping, destructive fishing practices, coastal development, and oil spill.
Learn more:
http://www.greenpeace.org/lebanon/en/lebanon-oil-spill-2

A year after the war and oil spill, Lebanon's marine environment is under threat from sewage and waste dumping, destructive fishing practices, coastal development, and oil spill.
Learn more:
http://www.greenpeace.org/lebanon/en/lebanon-oil-spill-2

Beirut Travel Guide

Our BeirutTravelGuide! Friends, I am incredibly proud of this one. It took months of planning and prep to put together our Beirut episode but I hope you'll agree that it's been worth the wait. Beirut and Lebanon are extraordinary places, an absolute must on any traveler's bucket list. Great food, warm and generous people, breathtaking scenery, and a fascinating history. I am very, very proud to share our Beirut travel experiences with you.
Thanks to our friends at Banque du LibanAccelerate for supporting us in the creation of this episode - http://bdlaccelerate.com/
Our food experts Iffat and Hisham were part of the Taste Lebanon team - http://www.tastelebanon.co.uk/
How we film our travel guides - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPFmRWNzG84

48 Hours in Lebanon 2016: Beirut, Jeitta Grotto & Byblos

CompleteGuide: http://bit.ly/200crcd
We've just returned from an insane weekend trip to Beirut from Dubai. Now, we left on a Thursday morning and took advantage of a 3 day weekend, but having stayed up until 8am on Saturday morning - if you plan it right you can easily do it all in a weekend.
From the Jeitta grotto to Byblos, the tram to Harissa and everything in Beirut, we show you the best bars, restaurants, activities, transportation and hotels to make your trip complete.
Subscribe to our Newsletter: https://whatdoesntsuck.com/newsletter/
Follow us on Social Media for regular updates on What Doesn't SuckFacebook https://www.facebook.com/whatdoesntsuck
Twitter https://twitter.com/whatdoesntsuck_
Instagram https://instagram.com/whatdoesntsuck/
Pinterest https://www.pinterest.com...

A Tourist's guide to Beirut, Lebanon 2014

I see the corniche, Pigeon Rocks, the skyscrapers and as much as I can. www.theredquest.com

published: 25 Apr 2014

Lebanon is gorgeous, sunny, snowy, maddening, inspiring, irresistible... You have to watch this

Guide To Lebanon:
Lebanon offers plenty: from ancient Roman ruins, to well preserved castles, limestone caves, historic Churches and Mosques, beautiful beaches nestled in the Mediterranean Sea, Restaurants, world renown Lebanese cuisine, nonstop nightlife and discotheques, to mountainous ski resorts.
Qadisha, one of the deepest and most beautiful valleys in Lebanon, is indeed a world a part. At the bottom of this wild steep-sided gorge runs the Qadisha River whose source is in the Qadisha Grotto at the foot of the Cedars. And above the famous Cedar grove stands Qornet el Sawda, Lebanon's highest peak. This is truly Heaven on Earth
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourism_in_Lebanon
- http://www.safarilebanon.com/
- http://www.beirutnightlife.com/lifestyle/cultural/21-reasons-why-lebanon-is...

published: 10 Aug 2013

I'M IN LEBANON | Travel Vlog

I am in Beirut, Lebanon! I am currently interning with an amazing Christian nonprofit to help provide aid and relief for the SyrianRefugee crisis for the summer and am a little over a week in. I primarily work Mon-Thurs and Sunday so the clips are collection from some of the work and my time off. We have been doing a lot of work in churches and refugees camps. The refugee camps I have been to so far have asked us not to take pictures. But I am going to Bekaa Valley tomorrow, the largest Syrian refugee camp in all of Lebanon, for several days to film an organization that will be putting up tents and handing out supplies and hope to post about that soon!
with love,
elena
@elenataber
Come say hi:
http://bit.ly/elenataber
Business Inquiries: moonclique1@gmail.com

published: 23 May 2016

BEIRUT, LEBANON: LUXURY, LEISURE, AND LEBANESE ARMED FORCES [S1 EP10]

Beirut travel guide. Hitchhiking from Harissa to Beirut.
**NOTE: I HAD TO USE EGYPTIAN SONG AT THE END. I TRIED FINDING COPYRIGHTFREE LEBANESE HIPHOP BUT FAILED. PLEASE FORGIVE ME.
Music: "Beirut is a City" by Elepheel
Link: soundcloud.com/elepheel/beirut-is-a-city
*This track was edited for this film
Music: "Oubour" by Ghassan Sahhab
Link: soundcloud.com/ghassan-sahhab/oubour-a-voyage-across
*This track was edited for this film
Music: "3ashanek ya masr" by Ezdwag
Link: soundcloud.com/ezdwag/3ashanek-ya-masr-ezdwag
*This track was edited for this film

published: 13 Jun 2017

10 Things NOT To Do in Lebanon

Get more Tips here! http://www.destinationtips.com
For a nation on the border of Syria and Israel, you might expect some possibility of danger when visiting Lebanon. You'd be right. If you want to maximize your chances of having a pleasant vacation, here are some things not to do on a Lebanese holiday.
1. Don’t Be Afraid!
The people in Lebanon are perfectly friendly and the country is filled with gorgeous landmarks and fascinating history. Just relax and enjoy yourselves.
2. Make Sure to Dress Appropriately
Lebanon is a pretty conservative Arab country. Men and women are expected to avoid wearing anything more revealing than short-sleeves and shorts. Make sure your clothing is loose-fitting; women should consider covering their heads as well.
3. Don’t Just Stay in Beirut
Lebanon has som...

published: 03 Nov 2017

5 USEFUL Things To Know About Lebanon BEFORE Visiting

5 USEFUL Things To Know About Lebanon BEFORE Visiting
*My Patreon Page: https://www.patreon.com/MatarTV
*Online Lebanese Courses/coaching: Email me at matartuber@gmail.com
If you found this video valuable, give it a like.
If you know someone who needs to see it, share it.
Leave a comment below with your thoughts.
Add it to a playlist if you want to watch it later.
I get the same questions over and over again about Lebanon. So I decided to tell you some information about Lebanon before you come visit so you can have an idea on how it is here.
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Rise Above Lebanon (Full Version)

Commissioned by the Lebanese Ministry of Tourism, We spent 5 summer months filming Lebanon from Above, including its rural, urban, cultural touristic and historical location, as well as the amazing number of festivals.
The idea was to show Lebanon's beauty, diversity and wealth from another angle (above), in order to encourage and promote international and domestic tourism.
My main personal goal is to remind us all that Lebanon is not all about problems, political turmoil, trash...etc but is first and foremost a country that has so much to offer on such a small portion of land, and is still, in spite of everything, truly beautiful.
Maybe by seeing this video, people who lost sight of what Lebanon truly is, will have newfound optimism and strength to participate in steering the country i...

Beirut Travel Guide

Our BeirutTravelGuide! Friends, I am incredibly proud of this one. It took months of planning and prep to put together our Beirut episode but I hope you'll ag...

Our BeirutTravelGuide! Friends, I am incredibly proud of this one. It took months of planning and prep to put together our Beirut episode but I hope you'll agree that it's been worth the wait. Beirut and Lebanon are extraordinary places, an absolute must on any traveler's bucket list. Great food, warm and generous people, breathtaking scenery, and a fascinating history. I am very, very proud to share our Beirut travel experiences with you.
Thanks to our friends at Banque du LibanAccelerate for supporting us in the creation of this episode - http://bdlaccelerate.com/
Our food experts Iffat and Hisham were part of the Taste Lebanon team - http://www.tastelebanon.co.uk/
How we film our travel guides - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPFmRWNzG84

Our BeirutTravelGuide! Friends, I am incredibly proud of this one. It took months of planning and prep to put together our Beirut episode but I hope you'll agree that it's been worth the wait. Beirut and Lebanon are extraordinary places, an absolute must on any traveler's bucket list. Great food, warm and generous people, breathtaking scenery, and a fascinating history. I am very, very proud to share our Beirut travel experiences with you.
Thanks to our friends at Banque du LibanAccelerate for supporting us in the creation of this episode - http://bdlaccelerate.com/
Our food experts Iffat and Hisham were part of the Taste Lebanon team - http://www.tastelebanon.co.uk/
How we film our travel guides - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPFmRWNzG84

48 Hours in Lebanon 2016: Beirut, Jeitta Grotto & Byblos

CompleteGuide: http://bit.ly/200crcd
We've just returned from an insane weekend trip to Beirut from Dubai. Now, we left on a Thursday morning and took advant...

CompleteGuide: http://bit.ly/200crcd
We've just returned from an insane weekend trip to Beirut from Dubai. Now, we left on a Thursday morning and took advantage of a 3 day weekend, but having stayed up until 8am on Saturday morning - if you plan it right you can easily do it all in a weekend.
From the Jeitta grotto to Byblos, the tram to Harissa and everything in Beirut, we show you the best bars, restaurants, activities, transportation and hotels to make your trip complete.
Subscribe to our Newsletter: https://whatdoesntsuck.com/newsletter/
Follow us on Social Media for regular updates on What Doesn't SuckFacebook https://www.facebook.com/whatdoesntsuck
Twitter https://twitter.com/whatdoesntsuck_
Instagram https://instagram.com/whatdoesntsuck/
Pinterest https://www.pinterest.com/whatdoesntsuck/

CompleteGuide: http://bit.ly/200crcd
We've just returned from an insane weekend trip to Beirut from Dubai. Now, we left on a Thursday morning and took advantage of a 3 day weekend, but having stayed up until 8am on Saturday morning - if you plan it right you can easily do it all in a weekend.
From the Jeitta grotto to Byblos, the tram to Harissa and everything in Beirut, we show you the best bars, restaurants, activities, transportation and hotels to make your trip complete.
Subscribe to our Newsletter: https://whatdoesntsuck.com/newsletter/
Follow us on Social Media for regular updates on What Doesn't SuckFacebook https://www.facebook.com/whatdoesntsuck
Twitter https://twitter.com/whatdoesntsuck_
Instagram https://instagram.com/whatdoesntsuck/
Pinterest https://www.pinterest.com/whatdoesntsuck/

Guide To Lebanon:
Lebanon offers plenty: from ancient Roman ruins, to well preserved castles, limestone caves, historic Churches and Mosques, beautiful beaches nestled in the Mediterranean Sea, Restaurants, world renown Lebanese cuisine, nonstop nightlife and discotheques, to mountainous ski resorts.
Qadisha, one of the deepest and most beautiful valleys in Lebanon, is indeed a world a part. At the bottom of this wild steep-sided gorge runs the Qadisha River whose source is in the Qadisha Grotto at the foot of the Cedars. And above the famous Cedar grove stands Qornet el Sawda, Lebanon's highest peak. This is truly Heaven on Earth
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourism_in_Lebanon
- http://www.safarilebanon.com/
- http://www.beirutnightlife.com/lifestyle/cultural/21-reasons-why-lebanon-is-the-most-beautiful-country-in-the-world/

Guide To Lebanon:
Lebanon offers plenty: from ancient Roman ruins, to well preserved castles, limestone caves, historic Churches and Mosques, beautiful beaches nestled in the Mediterranean Sea, Restaurants, world renown Lebanese cuisine, nonstop nightlife and discotheques, to mountainous ski resorts.
Qadisha, one of the deepest and most beautiful valleys in Lebanon, is indeed a world a part. At the bottom of this wild steep-sided gorge runs the Qadisha River whose source is in the Qadisha Grotto at the foot of the Cedars. And above the famous Cedar grove stands Qornet el Sawda, Lebanon's highest peak. This is truly Heaven on Earth
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourism_in_Lebanon
- http://www.safarilebanon.com/
- http://www.beirutnightlife.com/lifestyle/cultural/21-reasons-why-lebanon-is-the-most-beautiful-country-in-the-world/

I am in Beirut, Lebanon! I am currently interning with an amazing Christian nonprofit to help provide aid and relief for the SyrianRefugee crisis for the summer and am a little over a week in. I primarily work Mon-Thurs and Sunday so the clips are collection from some of the work and my time off. We have been doing a lot of work in churches and refugees camps. The refugee camps I have been to so far have asked us not to take pictures. But I am going to Bekaa Valley tomorrow, the largest Syrian refugee camp in all of Lebanon, for several days to film an organization that will be putting up tents and handing out supplies and hope to post about that soon!
with love,
elena
@elenataber
Come say hi:
http://bit.ly/elenataber
Business Inquiries: moonclique1@gmail.com

I am in Beirut, Lebanon! I am currently interning with an amazing Christian nonprofit to help provide aid and relief for the SyrianRefugee crisis for the summer and am a little over a week in. I primarily work Mon-Thurs and Sunday so the clips are collection from some of the work and my time off. We have been doing a lot of work in churches and refugees camps. The refugee camps I have been to so far have asked us not to take pictures. But I am going to Bekaa Valley tomorrow, the largest Syrian refugee camp in all of Lebanon, for several days to film an organization that will be putting up tents and handing out supplies and hope to post about that soon!
with love,
elena
@elenataber
Come say hi:
http://bit.ly/elenataber
Business Inquiries: moonclique1@gmail.com

Beirut travel guide. Hitchhiking from Harissa to Beirut.
**NOTE: I HAD TO USE EGYPTIAN SONG AT THE END. I TRIED FINDING COPYRIGHTFREE LEBANESE HIPHOP BUT FAILED. PLEASE FORGIVE ME.
Music: "Beirut is a City" by Elepheel
Link: soundcloud.com/elepheel/beirut-is-a-city
*This track was edited for this film
Music: "Oubour" by Ghassan Sahhab
Link: soundcloud.com/ghassan-sahhab/oubour-a-voyage-across
*This track was edited for this film
Music: "3ashanek ya masr" by Ezdwag
Link: soundcloud.com/ezdwag/3ashanek-ya-masr-ezdwag
*This track was edited for this film

Beirut travel guide. Hitchhiking from Harissa to Beirut.
**NOTE: I HAD TO USE EGYPTIAN SONG AT THE END. I TRIED FINDING COPYRIGHTFREE LEBANESE HIPHOP BUT FAILED. PLEASE FORGIVE ME.
Music: "Beirut is a City" by Elepheel
Link: soundcloud.com/elepheel/beirut-is-a-city
*This track was edited for this film
Music: "Oubour" by Ghassan Sahhab
Link: soundcloud.com/ghassan-sahhab/oubour-a-voyage-across
*This track was edited for this film
Music: "3ashanek ya masr" by Ezdwag
Link: soundcloud.com/ezdwag/3ashanek-ya-masr-ezdwag
*This track was edited for this film

10 Things NOT To Do in Lebanon

Get more Tips here! http://www.destinationtips.com
For a nation on the border of Syria and Israel, you might expect some possibility of danger when visiting Leb...

Get more Tips here! http://www.destinationtips.com
For a nation on the border of Syria and Israel, you might expect some possibility of danger when visiting Lebanon. You'd be right. If you want to maximize your chances of having a pleasant vacation, here are some things not to do on a Lebanese holiday.
1. Don’t Be Afraid!
The people in Lebanon are perfectly friendly and the country is filled with gorgeous landmarks and fascinating history. Just relax and enjoy yourselves.
2. Make Sure to Dress Appropriately
Lebanon is a pretty conservative Arab country. Men and women are expected to avoid wearing anything more revealing than short-sleeves and shorts. Make sure your clothing is loose-fitting; women should consider covering their heads as well.
3. Don’t Just Stay in Beirut
Lebanon has some really gorgeous locations outside its most popular tourist spot. The people are generally hospitable and warm, and you can’t really say you’ve experienced true Lebanese culture until you’ve experienced something beyond Beirut.
4. Don’t Get Into a TaxiWithout Agreeing on a Price
Some tourists have complained that they were “taken” by cab drivers when they couldn’t agree on a final price. Avoid this by telling the cabbie where you’re going and agreeing on a price before you get in the car.
5. Don’t Forget that ‘Traveler’s Diarrhea’ Is a Real Thing
If you’ve never traveled to a developing nation, you should be aware that your first-world immune system might take a small hit … like, right when you land. Sometimes the jolt to your bowels hits quickly but it’ll pass quickly, don’t worry.
6. Don’t Take Pics of the M*litary
You can look at their installations, but your best bet is to simply keep your eyes on the beautiful scenery, not on the men trying to defend it.
7. Stay Away from Dahiyeh
The world famous suburb in southern Beirut has attracted lots of attention. Don’t go see it for yourself. The residents of Dahiyeh are just suburbanites who don’t appreciate being gawked at by some leering tourist.
8. Don’t Skip the Street Food
Lebanon is known for its scrumptious street food. There are several excellent meals served on a street corner, so if you’re just sticking to the glitzy restaurants, then you’re missing out on an integral part of Lebanese culture.
9. Don’t Take Pictures of the Locals Without Permission
There’s not some old world spooky superstition attached to this one, it’s just rude. How would you feel if you were walking down the street and a group of people wearing traditional Arab garb started taking pictures of you?
10. The StateDepartment’s Opinion
Earlier in the year, the Department of State issued a clear warning to avoid travel to Lebanon thanks to p*litical upheaval, sk*rmishes and other threats. In fact, the State Department has said that it cannot guarantee its ability to transport US citizens out of the country should the situation worsen.
Did you disagree with any of these?
Discuss and help contribute in our SubReddit!
https://www.reddit.com/r/destinationtips/

Get more Tips here! http://www.destinationtips.com
For a nation on the border of Syria and Israel, you might expect some possibility of danger when visiting Lebanon. You'd be right. If you want to maximize your chances of having a pleasant vacation, here are some things not to do on a Lebanese holiday.
1. Don’t Be Afraid!
The people in Lebanon are perfectly friendly and the country is filled with gorgeous landmarks and fascinating history. Just relax and enjoy yourselves.
2. Make Sure to Dress Appropriately
Lebanon is a pretty conservative Arab country. Men and women are expected to avoid wearing anything more revealing than short-sleeves and shorts. Make sure your clothing is loose-fitting; women should consider covering their heads as well.
3. Don’t Just Stay in Beirut
Lebanon has some really gorgeous locations outside its most popular tourist spot. The people are generally hospitable and warm, and you can’t really say you’ve experienced true Lebanese culture until you’ve experienced something beyond Beirut.
4. Don’t Get Into a TaxiWithout Agreeing on a Price
Some tourists have complained that they were “taken” by cab drivers when they couldn’t agree on a final price. Avoid this by telling the cabbie where you’re going and agreeing on a price before you get in the car.
5. Don’t Forget that ‘Traveler’s Diarrhea’ Is a Real Thing
If you’ve never traveled to a developing nation, you should be aware that your first-world immune system might take a small hit … like, right when you land. Sometimes the jolt to your bowels hits quickly but it’ll pass quickly, don’t worry.
6. Don’t Take Pics of the M*litary
You can look at their installations, but your best bet is to simply keep your eyes on the beautiful scenery, not on the men trying to defend it.
7. Stay Away from Dahiyeh
The world famous suburb in southern Beirut has attracted lots of attention. Don’t go see it for yourself. The residents of Dahiyeh are just suburbanites who don’t appreciate being gawked at by some leering tourist.
8. Don’t Skip the Street Food
Lebanon is known for its scrumptious street food. There are several excellent meals served on a street corner, so if you’re just sticking to the glitzy restaurants, then you’re missing out on an integral part of Lebanese culture.
9. Don’t Take Pictures of the Locals Without Permission
There’s not some old world spooky superstition attached to this one, it’s just rude. How would you feel if you were walking down the street and a group of people wearing traditional Arab garb started taking pictures of you?
10. The StateDepartment’s Opinion
Earlier in the year, the Department of State issued a clear warning to avoid travel to Lebanon thanks to p*litical upheaval, sk*rmishes and other threats. In fact, the State Department has said that it cannot guarantee its ability to transport US citizens out of the country should the situation worsen.
Did you disagree with any of these?
Discuss and help contribute in our SubReddit!
https://www.reddit.com/r/destinationtips/

5 USEFUL Things To Know About Lebanon BEFORE Visiting
*My Patreon Page: https://www.patreon.com/MatarTV
*Online Lebanese Courses/coaching: Email me at matartuber@gmail.com
If you found this video valuable, give it a like.
If you know someone who needs to see it, share it.
Leave a comment below with your thoughts.
Add it to a playlist if you want to watch it later.
I get the same questions over and over again about Lebanon. So I decided to tell you some information about Lebanon before you come visit so you can have an idea on how it is here.
*** Feel Free to Share This Video ***
https://youtu.be/2PQ8XwZTiCs
*** To Become #TeamHabibi Click Here ***
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCaeGK2AssEImuooN5zqzpcw?sub_confirmation=1
*** Follow Me On Social Media ***
Facebook: MatarTV - https://www.facebook.com/MatarTV -
Instagram: MatarTV - https://www.instagram.com/matartv/ -
Twitter: MatarTV - https://twitter.com/AliMatar3 -
Snapchat: Matar55
*** Check Out My Related Videos ***
What Lebanese-German Relationship Is Like... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F9Wfv7k9Hps
How The WorldSees Lebanon, And How It Really Is (React to Lebanon) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kA9BSoEjZFs
Peace out #Habibi

5 USEFUL Things To Know About Lebanon BEFORE Visiting
*My Patreon Page: https://www.patreon.com/MatarTV
*Online Lebanese Courses/coaching: Email me at matartuber@gmail.com
If you found this video valuable, give it a like.
If you know someone who needs to see it, share it.
Leave a comment below with your thoughts.
Add it to a playlist if you want to watch it later.
I get the same questions over and over again about Lebanon. So I decided to tell you some information about Lebanon before you come visit so you can have an idea on how it is here.
*** Feel Free to Share This Video ***
https://youtu.be/2PQ8XwZTiCs
*** To Become #TeamHabibi Click Here ***
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCaeGK2AssEImuooN5zqzpcw?sub_confirmation=1
*** Follow Me On Social Media ***
Facebook: MatarTV - https://www.facebook.com/MatarTV -
Instagram: MatarTV - https://www.instagram.com/matartv/ -
Twitter: MatarTV - https://twitter.com/AliMatar3 -
Snapchat: Matar55
*** Check Out My Related Videos ***
What Lebanese-German Relationship Is Like... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F9Wfv7k9Hps
How The WorldSees Lebanon, And How It Really Is (React to Lebanon) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kA9BSoEjZFs
Peace out #Habibi

Commissioned by the Lebanese Ministry of Tourism, We spent 5 summer months filming Lebanon from Above, including its rural, urban, cultural touristic and historical location, as well as the amazing number of festivals.
The idea was to show Lebanon's beauty, diversity and wealth from another angle (above), in order to encourage and promote international and domestic tourism.
My main personal goal is to remind us all that Lebanon is not all about problems, political turmoil, trash...etc but is first and foremost a country that has so much to offer on such a small portion of land, and is still, in spite of everything, truly beautiful.
Maybe by seeing this video, people who lost sight of what Lebanon truly is, will have newfound optimism and strength to participate in steering the country in the right direction, to understand that it is their country to love and protect.
_____________________________________________________
We filmed from mid June to early November and covered Mount Lebanon, Beirut, Southern Lebanon, the Bekaa, Baalbek and North Lebanon.
We received amazing support from the Ministry of Tourism, as well as the Ministry of Culture, the Ministry of Defense, the Lebanese Air Force and the Lebanese ArmyIntelligence.
From the beginning, a social media campaign was created on Instagram, under @riseabovelebanon, which yielded a lot of interest and followers, reaching an organic 12,000 followers so far.
The book, also titled "Rise Above Lebanon", was released on 2 December2015. it is a hardcover photography book of the highest standard, with 200 pages of images of Lebanon from Above and is available in all major bookshops in Lebanon.
The video, of a duration of 5 minutes was released by LiveLove Lebanon and the Ministry of Tourism on 4 February 2016 and immediately went viral, with over about 2 million views as well as over 40,000 shares, 12,000 likes and hundreds of comments (99% of which are positive).
The result is this video of 5 Minutes.
Producer: Two Wheels Across
Director/DOP: Christian Ghammachi
Editing: Sebastien Leclercq
Colour Grading: Belal Hibri(Rez Visual)
Music and Sound Design: Karim Khneisser

Commissioned by the Lebanese Ministry of Tourism, We spent 5 summer months filming Lebanon from Above, including its rural, urban, cultural touristic and historical location, as well as the amazing number of festivals.
The idea was to show Lebanon's beauty, diversity and wealth from another angle (above), in order to encourage and promote international and domestic tourism.
My main personal goal is to remind us all that Lebanon is not all about problems, political turmoil, trash...etc but is first and foremost a country that has so much to offer on such a small portion of land, and is still, in spite of everything, truly beautiful.
Maybe by seeing this video, people who lost sight of what Lebanon truly is, will have newfound optimism and strength to participate in steering the country in the right direction, to understand that it is their country to love and protect.
_____________________________________________________
We filmed from mid June to early November and covered Mount Lebanon, Beirut, Southern Lebanon, the Bekaa, Baalbek and North Lebanon.
We received amazing support from the Ministry of Tourism, as well as the Ministry of Culture, the Ministry of Defense, the Lebanese Air Force and the Lebanese ArmyIntelligence.
From the beginning, a social media campaign was created on Instagram, under @riseabovelebanon, which yielded a lot of interest and followers, reaching an organic 12,000 followers so far.
The book, also titled "Rise Above Lebanon", was released on 2 December2015. it is a hardcover photography book of the highest standard, with 200 pages of images of Lebanon from Above and is available in all major bookshops in Lebanon.
The video, of a duration of 5 minutes was released by LiveLove Lebanon and the Ministry of Tourism on 4 February 2016 and immediately went viral, with over about 2 million views as well as over 40,000 shares, 12,000 likes and hundreds of comments (99% of which are positive).
The result is this video of 5 Minutes.
Producer: Two Wheels Across
Director/DOP: Christian Ghammachi
Editing: Sebastien Leclercq
Colour Grading: Belal Hibri(Rez Visual)
Music and Sound Design: Karim Khneisser

Ex-Lebanese Army Commander: Assad fall would plunge Middle East in chaos

Syrian war - blood and sorrow mixed up in the fights of all against all. The chaos is frightening and confusing. Millions of lives off track, splashed over the neighboring countries. Lebanon is one of them, absorbing a tsunami of refugees and trying to lock the conflict outside of its borders. How successful is this attempt? Will Lebanon take sides in the conflict? Who can stop killings in Syria? Sophie travels to Beirut to talk to General Michel Aoun, a former Lebanese ArmyCommander, currently a politician and leader of the Free Patriotic Movement.
FOLLOW SophieCo on Twitter: http://twitter.com/SophieCo_RT
RT LIVE http://rt.com/on-air
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitte...

published: 27 Sep 2013

How natural gas could be a geopolitical game-changer in the Mideast

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could easily shake up the geopolitical order in the Middle East. Deep under the eastern Mediterranean lies the largest natural gas basin ever found on Europe's doorstep. But the gas fields often coincide with disputed borders between rival nations. Our reporter Marine Pradel investigated this lucrative resource, which everyone wants a piece of.
The billions of cubic metres of natural gas discovered in recent years off Israel, Egypt and Cyprus form what is now called the "Levantine Basin", the largest natural gas reservoir within easy reach of Europe.
The first major deposit, known as Tamar, was discovered in 2009 off the coast of Haifa, Is...

published: 12 May 2017

Lebanon is gorgeous, sunny, snowy, maddening, inspiring, irresistible... You have to watch this

Guide To Lebanon:
Lebanon offers plenty: from ancient Roman ruins, to well preserved castles, limestone caves, historic Churches and Mosques, beautiful beaches nestled in the Mediterranean Sea, Restaurants, world renown Lebanese cuisine, nonstop nightlife and discotheques, to mountainous ski resorts.
Qadisha, one of the deepest and most beautiful valleys in Lebanon, is indeed a world a part. At the bottom of this wild steep-sided gorge runs the Qadisha River whose source is in the Qadisha Grotto at the foot of the Cedars. And above the famous Cedar grove stands Qornet el Sawda, Lebanon's highest peak. This is truly Heaven on Earth
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourism_in_Lebanon
- http://www.safarilebanon.com/
- http://www.beirutnightlife.com/lifestyle/cultural/21-reasons-why-lebanon-is...

Beirut 1983 - In the Bunker

This is a cassette tape I found at a garage sale. It's an audio letter from a marine to his parents as he sits in bunker with other marines, that trails off into them talking about whats going on and general shooting the shit. You can hear shelling in the distance for most of the recording.

Ex-Lebanese Army Commander: Assad fall would plunge Middle East in chaos

Syrian war - blood and sorrow mixed up in the fights of all against all. The chaos is frightening and confusing. Millions of lives off track, splashed over the ...

Syrian war - blood and sorrow mixed up in the fights of all against all. The chaos is frightening and confusing. Millions of lives off track, splashed over the neighboring countries. Lebanon is one of them, absorbing a tsunami of refugees and trying to lock the conflict outside of its borders. How successful is this attempt? Will Lebanon take sides in the conflict? Who can stop killings in Syria? Sophie travels to Beirut to talk to General Michel Aoun, a former Lebanese ArmyCommander, currently a politician and leader of the Free Patriotic Movement.
FOLLOW SophieCo on Twitter: http://twitter.com/SophieCo_RT
RT LIVE http://rt.com/on-air
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Instagram http://instagram.com/rt
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/+RT
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 1 billion YouTube views benchmark.

Syrian war - blood and sorrow mixed up in the fights of all against all. The chaos is frightening and confusing. Millions of lives off track, splashed over the neighboring countries. Lebanon is one of them, absorbing a tsunami of refugees and trying to lock the conflict outside of its borders. How successful is this attempt? Will Lebanon take sides in the conflict? Who can stop killings in Syria? Sophie travels to Beirut to talk to General Michel Aoun, a former Lebanese ArmyCommander, currently a politician and leader of the Free Patriotic Movement.
FOLLOW SophieCo on Twitter: http://twitter.com/SophieCo_RT
RT LIVE http://rt.com/on-air
Subscribe to RT! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=RussiaToday
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/RTnews
Follow us on Twitter http://twitter.com/RT_com
Follow us on Instagram http://instagram.com/rt
Follow us on Google+ http://plus.google.com/+RT
RT (Russia Today) is a global news network broadcasting from Moscow and Washington studios. RT is the first news channel to break the 1 billion YouTube views benchmark.

How natural gas could be a geopolitical game-changer in the Mideast

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could ea...

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could easily shake up the geopolitical order in the Middle East. Deep under the eastern Mediterranean lies the largest natural gas basin ever found on Europe's doorstep. But the gas fields often coincide with disputed borders between rival nations. Our reporter Marine Pradel investigated this lucrative resource, which everyone wants a piece of.
The billions of cubic metres of natural gas discovered in recent years off Israel, Egypt and Cyprus form what is now called the "Levantine Basin", the largest natural gas reservoir within easy reach of Europe.
The first major deposit, known as Tamar, was discovered in 2009 off the coast of Haifa, Israel, by a consortium made up of Noble Energy (US) and Delek-Avner (Israel). Other gas fields were later discovered in the same zone of the "Levantine Basin": Leviathan (Israel), Aphrodite (Cyprus), but most importantly Zohr, in 2015 off the coast of Egypt: the largest gas field ever discovered in the Mediterranean, larger than all the others combined. It was found by the Italian oil giant ENI, which has already started to exploit it and is aiming to start production by the end of 2017.
Meanwhile, Israel, supported by its US ally, is drilling away, driven by a free-market and idealistic vision: exploiting the gas will oblige the countries of the region to co-operate as business partners, which will in turn create peace and stability.
But the gas under the Mediterranean Sea may also carry within it the seeds of new conflicts. On the divided island of Cyprus, it threatens reunification efforts. In Lebanon, its location - straddling the disputed maritime boundary with Israel - boosts the belligerent rhetoric of the armed Hezbollah group.
It is hoped the gas could be worth billions of dollars, and all eyes are on the highly coveted European gas market, which Russia would like to keep for itself.
Speaking to FRANCE 24 in Washington, the US Special Envoy and Coordinator for InternationalEnergyAffairs summarised the situation. “All of a sudden, it’s not just a bunch of fishermen that care about those waters. Suddenly, there’s billions and billions of dollars”, he explained. The stakes are certainly high. In total, nearly 3,500 billion cubic metres of natural gas could lie under the eastern Mediterranean, according to a study by the US Geological Survey.
From Egypt to Syria via Lebanon, Israel and Cyprus, our reporter investigated this precious resource, a double-edged sword that awakens old Cold War reflexes and could well upset the geopolitical order of an already unstable region.
Visit our website:
http://www.france24.com
Subscribe to our YouTube channel:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
Like us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/FRANCE24.EnglishFollow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/France24_en

Subscribe to France 24 now:
http://f24.my/youtubeEN
FRANCE 24 live news stream: all the latest news 24/7
http://f24.my/YTliveEN
It's a discovery that could easily shake up the geopolitical order in the Middle East. Deep under the eastern Mediterranean lies the largest natural gas basin ever found on Europe's doorstep. But the gas fields often coincide with disputed borders between rival nations. Our reporter Marine Pradel investigated this lucrative resource, which everyone wants a piece of.
The billions of cubic metres of natural gas discovered in recent years off Israel, Egypt and Cyprus form what is now called the "Levantine Basin", the largest natural gas reservoir within easy reach of Europe.
The first major deposit, known as Tamar, was discovered in 2009 off the coast of Haifa, Israel, by a consortium made up of Noble Energy (US) and Delek-Avner (Israel). Other gas fields were later discovered in the same zone of the "Levantine Basin": Leviathan (Israel), Aphrodite (Cyprus), but most importantly Zohr, in 2015 off the coast of Egypt: the largest gas field ever discovered in the Mediterranean, larger than all the others combined. It was found by the Italian oil giant ENI, which has already started to exploit it and is aiming to start production by the end of 2017.
Meanwhile, Israel, supported by its US ally, is drilling away, driven by a free-market and idealistic vision: exploiting the gas will oblige the countries of the region to co-operate as business partners, which will in turn create peace and stability.
But the gas under the Mediterranean Sea may also carry within it the seeds of new conflicts. On the divided island of Cyprus, it threatens reunification efforts. In Lebanon, its location - straddling the disputed maritime boundary with Israel - boosts the belligerent rhetoric of the armed Hezbollah group.
It is hoped the gas could be worth billions of dollars, and all eyes are on the highly coveted European gas market, which Russia would like to keep for itself.
Speaking to FRANCE 24 in Washington, the US Special Envoy and Coordinator for InternationalEnergyAffairs summarised the situation. “All of a sudden, it’s not just a bunch of fishermen that care about those waters. Suddenly, there’s billions and billions of dollars”, he explained. The stakes are certainly high. In total, nearly 3,500 billion cubic metres of natural gas could lie under the eastern Mediterranean, according to a study by the US Geological Survey.
From Egypt to Syria via Lebanon, Israel and Cyprus, our reporter investigated this precious resource, a double-edged sword that awakens old Cold War reflexes and could well upset the geopolitical order of an already unstable region.
Visit our website:
http://www.france24.com
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published:12 May 2017

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Lebanon is gorgeous, sunny, snowy, maddening, inspiring, irresistible... You have to watch this

Guide To Lebanon:
Lebanon offers plenty: from ancient Roman ruins, to well preserved castles, limestone caves, historic Churches and Mosques, beautiful beaches nestled in the Mediterranean Sea, Restaurants, world renown Lebanese cuisine, nonstop nightlife and discotheques, to mountainous ski resorts.
Qadisha, one of the deepest and most beautiful valleys in Lebanon, is indeed a world a part. At the bottom of this wild steep-sided gorge runs the Qadisha River whose source is in the Qadisha Grotto at the foot of the Cedars. And above the famous Cedar grove stands Qornet el Sawda, Lebanon's highest peak. This is truly Heaven on Earth
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourism_in_Lebanon
- http://www.safarilebanon.com/
- http://www.beirutnightlife.com/lifestyle/cultural/21-reasons-why-lebanon-is-the-most-beautiful-country-in-the-world/

Guide To Lebanon:
Lebanon offers plenty: from ancient Roman ruins, to well preserved castles, limestone caves, historic Churches and Mosques, beautiful beaches nestled in the Mediterranean Sea, Restaurants, world renown Lebanese cuisine, nonstop nightlife and discotheques, to mountainous ski resorts.
Qadisha, one of the deepest and most beautiful valleys in Lebanon, is indeed a world a part. At the bottom of this wild steep-sided gorge runs the Qadisha River whose source is in the Qadisha Grotto at the foot of the Cedars. And above the famous Cedar grove stands Qornet el Sawda, Lebanon's highest peak. This is truly Heaven on Earth
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourism_in_Lebanon
- http://www.safarilebanon.com/
- http://www.beirutnightlife.com/lifestyle/cultural/21-reasons-why-lebanon-is-the-most-beautiful-country-in-the-world/

Israel Is More Stuck Than Ever In South Lebanon (1999)

Lebanon - Readying for War: A new generation of Palestinian die-hards are training in Lebanon's refugee camps in preparation for confrontation with Israel
Sout...

Lebanon - Readying for War: A new generation of Palestinian die-hards are training in Lebanon's refugee camps in preparation for confrontation with Israel
South Africa's White SupremacistTraining Camps
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IKjoWRTtAWI
Faullujah's Legacy Of War Before ISIS
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ku4ChlPEik
LifeguardTraining Transforms Formerly Segregated Beaches
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w6Ft1qzhdJI
"The Jungle" At The Heart Of Calais' MigrantCrisis
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ErIkACoEpis
Subscribe to journeyman for daily uploads:
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Inside the training camp of the hard-line '13th SeptemberGroup' a commander hardens up a group of freshly armed teenage recruits by firing at their feet. Later there are lessons on using Katyusha rockets. Abu Khaled, chief of another radical Palestinian group, explains how he co-ordinates attacks with Hezbollah. Recognizing the popularity of resistance, the Amal movement, a rival Shia Muslim group to Hezbollah, has also resumed it's attacks against Israel. Watching the Amal fighters fire on an Israeli position, it is clear they are well trained and well armed.
The attacks now come in quick succession, aimed not at beating the Israelis back, but at weakening morale. "Of course we will win this guerrilla war, says one Hezbollah fighter, "we are in the right. The Israelis are occupying our land - we are not occupying theirs." For a regional analyst, these coordinated attacks are the first sign that the guerrilla war in Lebanon may intensify if Israel refuses to first satisfy Syria on the issue of the Golan Heights. Given the presence of these guerrilla fighters, any Israeli withdrawal from south Lebanon without a prior agreement with the Syrians on the Golan Heights would be deemed unilateral and premature, exposing Israel's northern border to continued guerrilla attacks. The reality could be that Israel is more stuck than ever in south Lebanon.
ME TV – Ref. 567
JourneymanPictures is your independent source for the world's most powerful films, exploring the burning issues of today. We represent stories from the world's top producers, with brand new content coming in all the time. On our channel you'll find outstanding and controversial journalism covering any global subject you can imagine wanting to know about.

Lebanon - Readying for War: A new generation of Palestinian die-hards are training in Lebanon's refugee camps in preparation for confrontation with Israel
South Africa's White SupremacistTraining Camps
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IKjoWRTtAWI
Faullujah's Legacy Of War Before ISIS
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ku4ChlPEik
LifeguardTraining Transforms Formerly Segregated Beaches
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w6Ft1qzhdJI
"The Jungle" At The Heart Of Calais' MigrantCrisis
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ErIkACoEpis
Subscribe to journeyman for daily uploads:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=journeymanpictures
For downloads and more information visit:
http://www.journeyman.tv/?lid=9146
Like us on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/journeymanpictures
Follow us on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/JourneymanVOD
https://twitter.com/JourneymanNews
Inside the training camp of the hard-line '13th SeptemberGroup' a commander hardens up a group of freshly armed teenage recruits by firing at their feet. Later there are lessons on using Katyusha rockets. Abu Khaled, chief of another radical Palestinian group, explains how he co-ordinates attacks with Hezbollah. Recognizing the popularity of resistance, the Amal movement, a rival Shia Muslim group to Hezbollah, has also resumed it's attacks against Israel. Watching the Amal fighters fire on an Israeli position, it is clear they are well trained and well armed.
The attacks now come in quick succession, aimed not at beating the Israelis back, but at weakening morale. "Of course we will win this guerrilla war, says one Hezbollah fighter, "we are in the right. The Israelis are occupying our land - we are not occupying theirs." For a regional analyst, these coordinated attacks are the first sign that the guerrilla war in Lebanon may intensify if Israel refuses to first satisfy Syria on the issue of the Golan Heights. Given the presence of these guerrilla fighters, any Israeli withdrawal from south Lebanon without a prior agreement with the Syrians on the Golan Heights would be deemed unilateral and premature, exposing Israel's northern border to continued guerrilla attacks. The reality could be that Israel is more stuck than ever in south Lebanon.
ME TV – Ref. 567
JourneymanPictures is your independent source for the world's most powerful films, exploring the burning issues of today. We represent stories from the world's top producers, with brand new content coming in all the time. On our channel you'll find outstanding and controversial journalism covering any global subject you can imagine wanting to know about.

Ancient Phoenician Ports and Colonies

Phoenecians, the ancient inhabitants of modern-day Lebanon, were known to be expert sailors. Through the eyes of one these seaworthy Phoenecians, we will visit ...

Phoenecians, the ancient inhabitants of modern-day Lebanon, were known to be expert sailors. Through the eyes of one these seaworthy Phoenecians, we will visit the ancient ports of Byblos, Rhodes, Tharros, Motya, and the famous Roman naval base at Carthage.
Phoenicia (UK /fɨˈnɪʃə/ or US /fəˈniːʃə/; from the Greek: Φοινίκη, Phoiníkē; Arabic: فينيقية‎, Finiqyah) was an ancient Semitic civilization situated on the western, coastal part of the Fertile Crescent and centered on the coastline of modern Lebanon and Tartus Governorate in Syria. All major Phoenician cities were on the coastline of the Mediterranean, some colonies reaching the Western Mediterranean. It was an enterprising maritime trading culture that spread across the Mediterranean from 1550 BC to 300 BC. The Phoenicians used the galley, a man-powered sailing vessel, and are credited with the invention of the bireme. They were famed in Classical Greece and Rome as 'traders in purple', referring to their monopoly on the precious purple dye of the Murex snail, used, among other things, for royal clothing, and for their spread of the alphabet (or abjad), from which almost all modern phonetic alphabets are derived.
Phoenicians are widely thought to have originated from the earlier Canaanite inhabitants of the region. Although Egyptian seafaring expeditions had already been made to Byblos to bring back "cedars of Lebanon" as early as the 3rd millennium BC, continuous contact only occurred in the Egyptian New Empire period. In theAmarna tablets of the 14th century BC, people from the region called themselves Kenaani or Kinaani (either the same as the Canaanites, or the Kenanites/Cainanites spoken of the Septuagint version of Gen. 10:24), although these letters predate the invasion of the Sea Peoples by over a century. Much later, in the 6th century BC, Hecataeus of Miletus writes that Phoenicia was formerly called χνα (Latinized: khna), a name Philo of Byblos later adopted into his mythology as his eponym for the Phoenicians: "Khna who was afterwards called Phoinix".
Phoenicia is really a Classical Greek term used to refer to the region of the major Canaanite port towns, and does not correspond exactly to a cultural identity that would have been recognised by the Phoenicians themselves. It is uncertain to what extent the Phoenicians viewed themselves as a single ethnicity and nationality. Their civilization was organized in city-states, similar to ancient Greece. However, in terms of archaeology, language, life style and religion, there is little to set the Phoenicians apart as markedly different from other Semitic cultures of Canaan. As Canaanites, they were unique in their remarkable seafaring achievements.

Phoenecians, the ancient inhabitants of modern-day Lebanon, were known to be expert sailors. Through the eyes of one these seaworthy Phoenecians, we will visit the ancient ports of Byblos, Rhodes, Tharros, Motya, and the famous Roman naval base at Carthage.
Phoenicia (UK /fɨˈnɪʃə/ or US /fəˈniːʃə/; from the Greek: Φοινίκη, Phoiníkē; Arabic: فينيقية‎, Finiqyah) was an ancient Semitic civilization situated on the western, coastal part of the Fertile Crescent and centered on the coastline of modern Lebanon and Tartus Governorate in Syria. All major Phoenician cities were on the coastline of the Mediterranean, some colonies reaching the Western Mediterranean. It was an enterprising maritime trading culture that spread across the Mediterranean from 1550 BC to 300 BC. The Phoenicians used the galley, a man-powered sailing vessel, and are credited with the invention of the bireme. They were famed in Classical Greece and Rome as 'traders in purple', referring to their monopoly on the precious purple dye of the Murex snail, used, among other things, for royal clothing, and for their spread of the alphabet (or abjad), from which almost all modern phonetic alphabets are derived.
Phoenicians are widely thought to have originated from the earlier Canaanite inhabitants of the region. Although Egyptian seafaring expeditions had already been made to Byblos to bring back "cedars of Lebanon" as early as the 3rd millennium BC, continuous contact only occurred in the Egyptian New Empire period. In theAmarna tablets of the 14th century BC, people from the region called themselves Kenaani or Kinaani (either the same as the Canaanites, or the Kenanites/Cainanites spoken of the Septuagint version of Gen. 10:24), although these letters predate the invasion of the Sea Peoples by over a century. Much later, in the 6th century BC, Hecataeus of Miletus writes that Phoenicia was formerly called χνα (Latinized: khna), a name Philo of Byblos later adopted into his mythology as his eponym for the Phoenicians: "Khna who was afterwards called Phoinix".
Phoenicia is really a Classical Greek term used to refer to the region of the major Canaanite port towns, and does not correspond exactly to a cultural identity that would have been recognised by the Phoenicians themselves. It is uncertain to what extent the Phoenicians viewed themselves as a single ethnicity and nationality. Their civilization was organized in city-states, similar to ancient Greece. However, in terms of archaeology, language, life style and religion, there is little to set the Phoenicians apart as markedly different from other Semitic cultures of Canaan. As Canaanites, they were unique in their remarkable seafaring achievements.

Beirut 1983 - In the Bunker

This is a cassette tape I found at a garage sale. It's an audio letter from a marine to his parents as he sits in bunker with other marines, that trails off int...

This is a cassette tape I found at a garage sale. It's an audio letter from a marine to his parents as he sits in bunker with other marines, that trails off into them talking about whats going on and general shooting the shit. You can hear shelling in the distance for most of the recording.

This is a cassette tape I found at a garage sale. It's an audio letter from a marine to his parents as he sits in bunker with other marines, that trails off into them talking about whats going on and general shooting the shit. You can hear shelling in the distance for most of the recording.

There is a long very complex story leading to these series of bombings. To fully understand the motivation and ideology you have to go back to the King David Hotel Bombing. FollowingWW2 militant Europeans migrated to Palestine claiming religious right to the land. Violent guerilla WW2 style tactics were introduced across racial and religious divide. Hitler was violently racist and religiously persecuted. Some arriving immigrants still believed in his method, desiring a violent final solution to race and religious divide. The prime motivational factor in the King David Hotel diplomatic bombing was to get the British to leave so the violent conquest could begin. The bombers dressed as muslim arabs, in classic false flag fashion. An hour after the US Ambassador took over in 1948, The US Consulate was bombed, just like the British before. The invading force Hagganah, employed parallel structure groups, like Irgun and Stern Gang, to do the wet work bombings, shootings, kidnappings, and assasinations of occupied British forces. The parallel groups served the same interest but allowed deniability. They loved bombing everthing from embassies and barracks to police and train stations. It worked! The British pulled out under the pressure. The terrorism paid off well for Israel. The nation was born in successful 'Embassy Bombings'.
Forward to the USS Liberty. US meddling threatens Israeli invasion of the Sinai during war with Egypt. Israel trys to sink an unarmed US Navy ship. Our allies are dangerous backstabbing killers that would attack ruthlessly to get their way. Allies don't bomb allied embassies and troops ... Israel does. They are not Americas ally, only an idiot would call repeat backstabbers an 'ally'..
Forward to the Lebanese Civil War. Power structures and government vitally important to Israel crumble and fall. Israel takes sides and begins training, supplying, and operating violent militia groups to counter Turkish and Syrian influence. The worst in terrorism and mass killings was the Phalangists, an Israeli backed Al-Qaeda-like parallel structure, labeled for western media as Christian Democrats, that could do Israeli wet operations. They car bombed everything they could drive up to.
The Israeli backed militias were unable to sieze power in Beirut. Israel announced its intent to invade the golan border region for security from 'Palestinian' rockets as early as 1980. They just needed provocation. It soon came with an attempted assasinatio outside the Israeli embassy in UK. The 1982 Lebanon War (Hebrew: מלחמת לבנון הראשונה‎, Milhemet Levanon Harishona, "the first Lebanon war"), called Operation Peace for Galilee (Hebrew: מבצע שלום הגליל, or מבצע של"ג‎ Mivtsa Shlom HaGalil or Mivtsa Sheleg) by Israel, and later known in Israel as the Lebanon War and First Lebanon War, began on 6 June 1982, when the Israel Defense Forces invaded southern Lebanon. They told Reagan it was for a buffer for rockets, then they drove straight to Beirut and seized power. Dirty rotten liars. Reagan was very disappointed they misled their true intentions. After the UN got word of the Palestinian and Lebanese civilians being slaughtered in war crimes under direct IDF command, a resolution was passed.
Reagan sent US marines not to stop the Palestinians from killing Israelis or Lebanese, but to stop them from being slaughtered by Israel's Al-Qaeda terrorist 'Christian' 'Democrat' structure. Reagan and the US Marines were like the British in 1946, interfering with a greater political picture vital to Israeli 'security' and interests in the region. Reagan, after 3 King Davids, did like the British and left. The Lebanese hostage crisis then immediately dragged him back to Israel which led to Israel supplying US weapons to our enemy, Iran, in a war with Iraq while America ran a parallel guerilla 'mujahadeen' militia, like Israel in Lebanon, in Iran's other neighbor, Afghanistan ... the rest is history.

1:59

Marine Corps In Lebanon In 1958

Like This Movie Trailer? Go to http://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video,...

Marine Corps In Lebanon In 1958

Like ThisMovie Trailer? Go to http://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video, or to see movie trailers of over 700 other military videos.
This a a two minute sample. The entire video is 50 minutes. This video is divided into two parts. Part one is narrated documenting the story of the Marines who landed in Lebanon to secure American interests, and the naval personnel that got them there. Titled "SummerIncident" this U.S. Navy film shows the preparations for and the landing of Marines in Lebanon in the summer of 1958 to guarantee the sovereignty of that country and to protect U.S. civilians there. Amphibious Squadron 4 en route to the U.S. is turned around. The carrier ESSEX, at Athens, Greece, gets underway for the eastern Mediterranean, and other Sixth Fleet units sail for Lebanon. AdmiralArleigh Burke, Chief of Naval Operations, is shown in several scenes in the Navy's flag plot in Washington, DC as the operation progresses. The 2ndBattalion, 2nd Marines are in the initial landing, from trhe APA 36, LST 1156 and other Sixth Fleet amphibious ships. Aircraft from the ESSEX provide reconnaisance and air support for the landing. This unopposed landing is carried out successfully by the Navy-Marine Corps team.
Part two of this video documents Marine Corps activities in and around Beirut including, the airport, waterfront, docks. Also includes a joint patrol of Beirut by Marine, Army, Navy and Lebanese police.

3:47

President Reagan's Remarks on Marine Barracks Bombing in Lebanon on October 23, 1983

Full Title: President Reagan, Nancy Reagan arrive on Marine One. The President makes state...

Marine Corps In Lebanon 1983

Like ThisMovie Trailer? Go to https://www.militaryvideo.com/ to purchase the entire video, or to see movie trailers of over 700 other military videos.
The first part of this 50-minute DVD covers the arrival at Beirut of the 24th Marine Amphibious Unit (MAU) in May 1983. Includes excellent scenes of Marines and equipment (tanks, amtracs, jeeps, etc..) coming ashore in Lebanon and moving inland.
Video also includes excellent aerials shot via helicopter of the city of Beirut.
The second part of this video covers the aftermath of the bombing of the Marine Corps Headquarters resulting in 241 dead. Includes extensive coverage of Marines and multinational forces clearing debris and removing bodies. Also includes a tour of the bombrd area by Vice PresidentGeorge Bush Sr.

1:26

U.S. Marines Landing In Lebanon (1958)

Lebanon.
Various shots of U.S. Marines landing in Lebanon. Marines carrying boxes on ...

Link to order this clip:
http://www.criticalpast.com/video/65675039923_United-States-Marines_boat-lowered-from-davit_marines-checked_man-operate-controls-aboard-ship
Historic Stock Footage Archival and VintageVideo Clips in HD.
U.S. Marines preparing for amphibious landing at Beirut, Lebanon, in 1958US Marines being checked by officers on deck of a transport ship, prior to disembarkation. Sailor operating controls to lower LCVP (Landing craftVehiclePersonnel) from the davit. Boat lowered over the side to transport Marines to the beach at Beirut, Lebanon. Location: Beirut Lebanon. Date: July 1958.
Visit us at www.CriticalPast.com:
57,000+ broadcast-quality historic clips for immediate download.
Fully digitized and searchable, the CriticalPast collection is one of the largest archival footage collections in the world. All clips are licensed royalty-free, worldwide, in perpetuity. CriticalPast offers immediate downloads of full-resolution HD and SD masters and full-resolution time-coded screeners, 24 hours a day, to serve the needs of broadcast news, TV, film, and publishing professionals worldwide. Still photo images extracted from the vintage footage are also available for immediate download. CriticalPast is your source for imagery of worldwide events, people, and B-roll spanning the 20th century.

2:16

Beirut Lebanon 1984 US Marine Corps

Ebook eB007-Beirut part one: Working in Beirut Lebanon during the 80s it was quite a time...

Beirut Lebanon 1984 US Marine Corps

Ebook eB007-Beirut part one: Working in Beirut Lebanon during the 80s it was quite a time. This was the first time I had ever been out of the country for any length of time. I had never been in the Middle East before I would often go walking around with my camera taking photographs.
I had no idea just how dangerous this was people would stop me and ask Yeah, what do you think you are doing or you cannot be walking in these neighborhoods with gestures to the camera. Yes I was doing it all the time little did I know that I could easily spent years in prison or be held for ransom.
Working for CBSNews in Lebanon during the early 80s was quite an adventure. I got to meet great people like Larry Pentax, Bob Simon and, many, many more. I was there for almost 2 ½ years. This book is a testimony of everyday life in Beirut during those troubled times.

Lebanese Marine And Wildlife Museum - Lebanon, Jeita

If you haven't been surprised, we are sure will be surprised when you visit The Marine And WildlifeMuseum - Lebanon, Jeita - Jeita GrottoMainRoad.
Welcome to the world's unique museum as classified by the National Geographic Society. For more than twenty years the owner Dr. Jamal Younes has been diving the depths of the seas in search of its treasures and wonderful creatures.
Today his collection of over two thousand species is displayed at The Marine And Wildlife Museum of Jeita. All that you will see is the biggest and finest in the world. This will be a once in a lifetime to see face to face the wonderful land and sea creatures of Lebanon.
Marine LifePresent:
-Giant Shells
-Sharks And Dolphins
-Molluscs
-Echinoderms
-Soft And HardCoral
-Sponges
Wildlife Present:
-Reptiles
-Mammals
-Birds
-Insects
Stones Present:
-250 Kinds of Semi-precious Stones
-Lebanese FossilsAll specimens are scientifically identified in French, English, and Arabic.
You haven't experienced Lebanon if you haven't visited the marine and wildlife museum containing Lebanon's most treasured collections.
E-Mail: younesj_2@hotmail.com G-Mail: jamalyounes46@gmail.com
WEBSITE: lbmarinlife.piczo.com

0:54

Israeli soldier killed by Lebanon sniper

Originally published on December 16, 2013
An Israeli soldier was killed by suspected sni...

Israeli soldier killed by Lebanon sniper

Originally published on December 16, 2013
An Israeli soldier was killed by suspected sniper fire from the Lebanese side of the border at around 8:30 pm Sunday. The shooting occurred as an IsraeliIDF patrol jeep was driving along a road near the town of Naqora, a site located along the so-called" blue line," the unofficial border between Israel and Lebanon.
Sources from both Israel and Lebanon say the first shots were fired from the Lebanese side of the border. Israeli troops returned fire. Reports claim the Lebanese military has confirmed one of its soldiers is missing and is a suspect in the incident.
IDF troops returned fire and offered first aid to the Israeli soldier hit by sniper gunfire, but the man, identified in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz as 31 year-old Master Sgt. Sholmi Cohen, died after being transported to hospital.
The area where the shooting occurred has not seen significant flare-ups of violence for some three years and initially, Israeli authorities believed the shooting could have been a diversion to allow militants to slip into Israel. IDF helicopters dropped flares over the area, but no infiltrates were seen.
The United Nations has called on all sides to exercise restraint, but a senior Israeli officer told reporters that Israel reserves the right to respond in its own way and said the military is contemplating its options.
Both Israel and Lebanon are investigating the shooting, but both sides say they do not believe the militant group Hezbollah was involved in Sunday's shooting.
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Please watch: "Crying dog breaks the internet’s heart — but this sad dog story has a happy ending"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4prKTN9bYQc
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

1:51

At Sea, Lebanon

Change of command ceremony off the Lebanese coast on Friday (February 29) to hand over the...

The Sea of Lebanon

A year after the war and oil spill, Lebanon's marine environment is under threat from sewage and waste dumping, destructive fishing practices, coastal development, and oil spill.
Learn more:
http://www.greenpeace.org/lebanon/en/lebanon-oil-spill-2

5:03

IKE SEAMANS US MARINES FIGHT LEBANON 1983

These two reports by Ike Seamans were in August 1983. They proved to be ominous warnings t...

Beirut Travel Guide

Our BeirutTravelGuide! Friends, I am incredibly proud of this one. It took months of planning and prep to put together our Beirut episode but I hope you'll agree that it's been worth the wait. Beirut and Lebanon are extraordinary places, an absolute must on any traveler's bucket list. Great food, warm and generous people, breathtaking scenery, and a fascinating history. I am very, very proud to share our Beirut travel experiences with you.
Thanks to our friends at Banque du LibanAccelerate for supporting us in the creation of this episode - http://bdlaccelerate.com/
Our food experts Iffat and Hisham were part of the Taste Lebanon team - http://www.tastelebanon.co.uk/
How we film our travel guides - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oPFmRWNzG84

48 Hours in Lebanon 2016: Beirut, Jeitta Grotto & Byblos

CompleteGuide: http://bit.ly/200crcd
We've just returned from an insane weekend trip to Beirut from Dubai. Now, we left on a Thursday morning and took advantage of a 3 day weekend, but having stayed up until 8am on Saturday morning - if you plan it right you can easily do it all in a weekend.
From the Jeitta grotto to Byblos, the tram to Harissa and everything in Beirut, we show you the best bars, restaurants, activities, transportation and hotels to make your trip complete.
Subscribe to our Newsletter: https://whatdoesntsuck.com/newsletter/
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6:48

Visit Lebanon® 2017

Discover Visit Lebanon® 2017. A high-end Forum and B2B meeting between the International T...

Lebanon is gorgeous, sunny, snowy, maddening, inspiring, irresistible... You have to watch this

Guide To Lebanon:
Lebanon offers plenty: from ancient Roman ruins, to well preserved castles, limestone caves, historic Churches and Mosques, beautiful beaches nestled in the Mediterranean Sea, Restaurants, world renown Lebanese cuisine, nonstop nightlife and discotheques, to mountainous ski resorts.
Qadisha, one of the deepest and most beautiful valleys in Lebanon, is indeed a world a part. At the bottom of this wild steep-sided gorge runs the Qadisha River whose source is in the Qadisha Grotto at the foot of the Cedars. And above the famous Cedar grove stands Qornet el Sawda, Lebanon's highest peak. This is truly Heaven on Earth
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourism_in_Lebanon
- http://www.safarilebanon.com/
- http://www.beirutnightlife.com/lifestyle/cultural/21-reasons-why-lebanon-is-the-most-beautiful-country-in-the-world/

6:16

I'M IN LEBANON | Travel Vlog

I am in Beirut, Lebanon! I am currently interning with an amazing Christian nonprofit to h...

I'M IN LEBANON | Travel Vlog

I am in Beirut, Lebanon! I am currently interning with an amazing Christian nonprofit to help provide aid and relief for the SyrianRefugee crisis for the summer and am a little over a week in. I primarily work Mon-Thurs and Sunday so the clips are collection from some of the work and my time off. We have been doing a lot of work in churches and refugees camps. The refugee camps I have been to so far have asked us not to take pictures. But I am going to Bekaa Valley tomorrow, the largest Syrian refugee camp in all of Lebanon, for several days to film an organization that will be putting up tents and handing out supplies and hope to post about that soon!
with love,
elena
@elenataber
Come say hi:
http://bit.ly/elenataber
Business Inquiries: moonclique1@gmail.com

11:40

BEIRUT, LEBANON: LUXURY, LEISURE, AND LEBANESE ARMED FORCES [S1 EP10]

Beirut travel guide. Hitchhiking from Harissa to Beirut.
**NOTE: I HAD TO USE EGYPTIAN SO...

BEIRUT, LEBANON: LUXURY, LEISURE, AND LEBANESE ARMED FORCES [S1 EP10]

Beirut travel guide. Hitchhiking from Harissa to Beirut.
**NOTE: I HAD TO USE EGYPTIAN SONG AT THE END. I TRIED FINDING COPYRIGHTFREE LEBANESE HIPHOP BUT FAILED. PLEASE FORGIVE ME.
Music: "Beirut is a City" by Elepheel
Link: soundcloud.com/elepheel/beirut-is-a-city
*This track was edited for this film
Music: "Oubour" by Ghassan Sahhab
Link: soundcloud.com/ghassan-sahhab/oubour-a-voyage-across
*This track was edited for this film
Music: "3ashanek ya masr" by Ezdwag
Link: soundcloud.com/ezdwag/3ashanek-ya-masr-ezdwag
*This track was edited for this film

3:32

10 Things NOT To Do in Lebanon

Get more Tips here! http://www.destinationtips.com
For a nation on the border of Syria and...

10 Things NOT To Do in Lebanon

Get more Tips here! http://www.destinationtips.com
For a nation on the border of Syria and Israel, you might expect some possibility of danger when visiting Lebanon. You'd be right. If you want to maximize your chances of having a pleasant vacation, here are some things not to do on a Lebanese holiday.
1. Don’t Be Afraid!
The people in Lebanon are perfectly friendly and the country is filled with gorgeous landmarks and fascinating history. Just relax and enjoy yourselves.
2. Make Sure to Dress Appropriately
Lebanon is a pretty conservative Arab country. Men and women are expected to avoid wearing anything more revealing than short-sleeves and shorts. Make sure your clothing is loose-fitting; women should consider covering their heads as well.
3. Don’t Just Stay in Beirut
Lebanon has some really gorgeous locations outside its most popular tourist spot. The people are generally hospitable and warm, and you can’t really say you’ve experienced true Lebanese culture until you’ve experienced something beyond Beirut.
4. Don’t Get Into a TaxiWithout Agreeing on a Price
Some tourists have complained that they were “taken” by cab drivers when they couldn’t agree on a final price. Avoid this by telling the cabbie where you’re going and agreeing on a price before you get in the car.
5. Don’t Forget that ‘Traveler’s Diarrhea’ Is a Real Thing
If you’ve never traveled to a developing nation, you should be aware that your first-world immune system might take a small hit … like, right when you land. Sometimes the jolt to your bowels hits quickly but it’ll pass quickly, don’t worry.
6. Don’t Take Pics of the M*litary
You can look at their installations, but your best bet is to simply keep your eyes on the beautiful scenery, not on the men trying to defend it.
7. Stay Away from Dahiyeh
The world famous suburb in southern Beirut has attracted lots of attention. Don’t go see it for yourself. The residents of Dahiyeh are just suburbanites who don’t appreciate being gawked at by some leering tourist.
8. Don’t Skip the Street Food
Lebanon is known for its scrumptious street food. There are several excellent meals served on a street corner, so if you’re just sticking to the glitzy restaurants, then you’re missing out on an integral part of Lebanese culture.
9. Don’t Take Pictures of the Locals Without Permission
There’s not some old world spooky superstition attached to this one, it’s just rude. How would you feel if you were walking down the street and a group of people wearing traditional Arab garb started taking pictures of you?
10. The StateDepartment’s Opinion
Earlier in the year, the Department of State issued a clear warning to avoid travel to Lebanon thanks to p*litical upheaval, sk*rmishes and other threats. In fact, the State Department has said that it cannot guarantee its ability to transport US citizens out of the country should the situation worsen.
Did you disagree with any of these?
Discuss and help contribute in our SubReddit!
https://www.reddit.com/r/destinationtips/

5 USEFUL Things To Know About Lebanon BEFORE Visiting

5 USEFUL Things To Know About Lebanon BEFORE Visiting
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I get the same questions over and over again about Lebanon. So I decided to tell you some information about Lebanon before you come visit so you can have an idea on how it is here.
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Rise Above Lebanon (Full Version)

Commissioned by the Lebanese Ministry of Tourism, We spent 5 summer months filming Lebanon from Above, including its rural, urban, cultural touristic and historical location, as well as the amazing number of festivals.
The idea was to show Lebanon's beauty, diversity and wealth from another angle (above), in order to encourage and promote international and domestic tourism.
My main personal goal is to remind us all that Lebanon is not all about problems, political turmoil, trash...etc but is first and foremost a country that has so much to offer on such a small portion of land, and is still, in spite of everything, truly beautiful.
Maybe by seeing this video, people who lost sight of what Lebanon truly is, will have newfound optimism and strength to participate in steering the country in the right direction, to understand that it is their country to love and protect.
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We filmed from mid June to early November and covered Mount Lebanon, Beirut, Southern Lebanon, the Bekaa, Baalbek and North Lebanon.
We received amazing support from the Ministry of Tourism, as well as the Ministry of Culture, the Ministry of Defense, the Lebanese Air Force and the Lebanese ArmyIntelligence.
From the beginning, a social media campaign was created on Instagram, under @riseabovelebanon, which yielded a lot of interest and followers, reaching an organic 12,000 followers so far.
The book, also titled "Rise Above Lebanon", was released on 2 December2015. it is a hardcover photography book of the highest standard, with 200 pages of images of Lebanon from Above and is available in all major bookshops in Lebanon.
The video, of a duration of 5 minutes was released by LiveLove Lebanon and the Ministry of Tourism on 4 February 2016 and immediately went viral, with over about 2 million views as well as over 40,000 shares, 12,000 likes and hundreds of comments (99% of which are positive).
The result is this video of 5 Minutes.
Producer: Two Wheels Across
Director/DOP: Christian Ghammachi
Editing: Sebastien Leclercq
Colour Grading: Belal Hibri(Rez Visual)
Music and Sound Design: Karim Khneisser